Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #600 - Twitter Exec BLOWS WHISTLE Proving Elon Musk Was RIGHT w/Tyler Merritt
Episode Date: August 24, 2022Twitter Exec BLOWS WHISTLE Proving Elon Musk Was RIGHT w/Tyler Merritt Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, So a whistleblower has come out.
A Twitter executive has come out saying that their security is totally bad,
that they're, I believe he said
they were lying to shareholders and board members and that Elon Musk is correct. They're withholding
information on how many bots and spam accounts they actually have. And apparently they have the
information. Elon Musk has now tweeted about it because it's looking like he's going to win his
lawsuit now. This is crazy. I don't know why this guy came out, this whistleblower, but apparently you got Democrats and Republicans on board mentioning
this. So we'll get into all that. Plus we've got big news from, from last night. I tweeted this
after we did the show, we had the surgeon general from Florida on, and he was talking about masks
and vaccines. And I told him, I was like, you know, we talked about it on the show that YouTube
bans you. If you say negative things about masks. Dan Bongino got suspended from YouTube. Rand Paul got suspended from YouTube. So after the show, we pulled up
the misinformation policy they have removed. YouTube has removed the provision saying you
can't make these claims about masks, which is funny. They did it kind of quietly. And I wonder
exactly when in April they had them in place. Now they don't. So it's interesting how that works, isn't it? We'll talk about that.
Plus, Trump is suing the U.S. government over the raid on his house. He's trying to stop the FBI
from going through all these documents. We'll get into all of that before we get started. My friends
head over to Timcast dot com. Become a member if you'd like to support our work. We're going to
have an awesome members only show coming up tonight and the first official episode of Cast Castle now as the show on timcast.com is up.
Admittedly, we've got a lot of work to do. We need to improve the audio quality and get lens
filters and all this stuff, but my motto is always just start doing things. Cast Castle's been on
quite a journey, and the main reason we switched over the website
is that we wanted more time to make something good.
And it doesn't work on YouTube.
We can't make a show like this
and just hope it's free and people watch it.
So we've got two episodes of the promo episode
and the first official episode are up now at timcast.com
for members.
And don't forget Tales from the Inverted World.
Smash that like button, subscribe to this channel,
share the show with your friends.
Joining us tonight to talk about this news and more is Tyler Merritt.
Hey, thanks for having me on, man.
Who are you?
Oh, wow. Put it on the spot.
Well, who I am, I'm an entrepreneur, businessman.
Started off in the military about 2006.
I was flying Apaches for our great nation over in Iraq.
Got picked up for Task Force 160th.
Flew for special operations for most of my career.
And my side hustle was starting this t-shirt company called Nine Line Apparel.
I started about 10 years ago.
Grew from my garage to about 250 hard-working, red-blooded Americans in Savannah, Georgia.
And we make some pretty nice apparel, if I do say so myself.
Right on.
Well, glad you could join us.
It should be fun.
We also have Hannah-Claire Brimelow.
She's back.
Yeah, I'm back.
I'm Hannah-Claire Brimelow.
I'm a writer for TimCast.com.
And I am Ian Crossland.
What's up, everybody?
Welcome to the show.
And hi, I'm Chris.
Lydia is recovering from surgery.
She had to get a bunch of nails.
What did she get, like metal plates in her wrist or something?
Something serious.
Skating is dangerous.
You've got to wear your wrist guards and your helmets and all that stuff.
All right, let's jump into this first story.
We've got this from the Wall Street Journal.
Twitter's ex-security head files whistleblower complaint on spam and privacy issues.
Former executive Peter Zatko makes sweeping
claims with the social network platform. The complaint, which is submitted to the Securities
and Exchange Commission last month and became public Tuesday, was made by Peter Zatko,
also known as Mudge, she's a hacker, who was fired earlier this year. Mr. Zatko's submission says he
that he uncovered extreme egregious deficiencies by Twitter in every area of his mandate,
including privacy,
digital and physical security, platform integrity, and content moderation.
I'm going to jump over to our good friend, Elon Musk. As many of you know, he's suing Twitter
because he says they didn't disclose information on bots. He's subpoenaed Jack Dorsey, the former
CEO. And he tweeted this, give a little whistle. And it's a Jiminy Cricket. And then underneath it,
he says, so spam prevalence was shared with the board, but the board chose not to disclose that
to the public. The Washington Post reported four people familiar with the company's process for
spam detection, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe sensitive
internal matters, told the Post that the company keeps several internal tallies of spam and bots, known as prevalence, across the service beyond the number supplied
to Wall Street. The Post also obtained an internal document which was redacted to hide the numbers,
showing that spam prevalence was a number shared with the board. The document was supplied to the
board at the meetings Echo attended, according to two of the people, but not to Wall Street.
So does that include the shareholders? How is this going to work? The big revelation here
is that this dude said he believes foreign intelligence service agents or individuals
could be at Twitter and they're not doing anything about it. That to me is probably
the biggest red flag. And this is probably why, in my opinion, they freaked out when Elon Musk was planning to buy it. Then some weird algorithmic thing happened with the right gaining
tons of followers, the left losing tons of followers. Then Elon Musk said, I want the data
on bots. And they didn't give it to him. Now we're learning they didn't give it to him, that they had
a number that was shared with the board. Well, actually, I shouldn't say that. Maybe Elon Musk
was given access to this, but because of the NDA, he wasn't allowed to talk about it. I don't know.
Either way, it sounds like this is going to help him win, which is kind of bad news because Elon
winning means he doesn't buy Twitter. But I don't know. What do you guys think about this
foreign intelligence thing? I think that's the big takeaway.
I'm one of the biggest Elon Musk fans, and I don't really care if that gets me in trouble
these days.
You're talking about a modern-day Ironman.
I was in Ukraine not that long ago.
This guy's given away some communication devices that totally changed and altered the way that that country stayed independent.
This is a guy who it seems like is putting his money where his passion is.
He puts everything out there.
And I was very excited to have maybe one platform
I could put my money towards
that actually cared about pushing out the truth,
cared about putting every person's perspective out there
and not moderating, not censoring,
not blocking people's opinions.
I've been on social for 10 plus years.
Started my company off Facebook and Instagram advertising.
In November of this last year, right before Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Facebook, in its infinite wisdom, decided that I needed to be banned.
My company needed to be banned.
Well, I mean, look at that hat, dude.
Absolutely.
That's a dangerous hat.
And actually, you know, when we broke down the violations, right?
You know, they couldn't really get me on anything
except for my brother posted six years ago
about a partnership we had with Jeep.
They said that was violating intellectual property of Jeep.
I mean, Jeep didn't complain
because I actually had paperwork
and I was working with Jeep.
So it wasn't a violation.
But they said that I was using it
and I didn't take it down in time.
So they banned my account for a year. I'm still actually blocked. You can't, you couldn't search
for my account. You couldn't like my account. I couldn't share my account. And every single person
that liked my account seemed to be shadow banned. You know, it sucks when Don jr likes your page
and that's a detriment, right? Because if there's these bad blue check marks out there and everyone
thinks, Oh, it's a blue check marks out there and everyone thinks,
oh, it's a blue check mark. That's just a famous person. Well, look behind the back end.
They're classifying and categorizing your blue check mark. If you're a celebrity that has positive
messages in their opinion, you get exposure. If you're a celebrity, a politician that has a
message that goes against their narrative, then you are banned. Not necessarily officially if they can't do it, but you'll be shadow banned.
And everyone sees it, and it's known.
But we have no transparency.
There's no oversight.
And these social media oligarchs, they've been acting as such.
They're untouchable.
They can do whatever, and it's despicable.
I think your company is a really good example of the censorship that's overlooked.
These high-profile left and establishment journalists will be like, oh, when Joe Rogan got canceled, it made him bigger or whatever.
And that's what they want people to think canceling is.
Meanwhile, your business gets shut down and there's no big fanfare.
There's no big headline.
Most of the people I hear from who say they got banned are like small accounts.
Oh, yeah.
And we're talking about millions of followers.
And we're talking about millions of dollars for a relatively small business.
I started my garage.
And now we have large accounts.
I have Bass Pro.
I have Cabela's.
I have five, six retail stores that are very highly frequented in Charleston and Savannah and Delray.
And people come from all over to our store to experience it.
And that gives us a sense of, you could try to shut me down, but I'm not going away.
I'll find a new platform.
And I was really excited about Twitter being that new platform.
I don't even have an account.
You asked me earlier, what's my Twitter account?
I don't think I have one.
Because I'm kind of over social.
If I could pull all of my marketing dollars, I would.
Right now, they don't seem to care.
If I'm spending well over a million dollars a year with Facebook and they cancel my account rep because of a false narrative, just because you don't like my opinions.
And of all of the groups that are like me, I'm probably the least noisy, the least in your face, but I do appreciate the
Second Amendment, the First Amendment. And I got banned from writing the First Amendment on a
t-shirt. And it was told to me that that was against Facebook's policies. And I'm like, yeah,
First Amendment, you know, the rights that shall not be infringed. Can't have people learning about
that. But I pushed out an email to our 1 million plus active email accounts, and we will sell a ton of shirts, and I will get a way around it.
It's just very sad that I can't promote First Amendment, Second Amendment, because you take those away, and there's no stopping a government.
I had an idea for a TV show we talked about once.
I think it was on the Members podcast, where it's this post-apocalyptic future and there's like one city left and uh no one
understands how the world ended but like the world ended and then like people came together
and built a city and they're rebuilding and it's like sometime around 2077 or you know 2080 or
whatever just history just dead stops and then humanity is just gone from the planet cities are
in ruin and decay and then the idea for this was, you know, the people in the city eventually encounter strange beings.
They think they're aliens.
They go to war.
Then it turns out, oh, the aliens are actually people and the world didn't end.
What happened was as technology advanced, more and more information went into the metaverse.
Then eventually people just went into the metaverse and they live their lives there now.
And there's very little work that has to be done because they're not really moving their bodies. They don't need that much caloric energy.
And so there's only certain scouts that go out to replenish the system. We talked about that.
And I got that idea because I was thinking of how social media works, how these social networks are
banning people. And then just this past weekend, I was at an antique store and we were looking at
all these books.
This guy had a bunch of crazy – we had books from the Civil War.
We got the photographic collection, photographic history of the Civil War, crazy, from 1911.
So there's actual photos of, like, the 1860s.
It's nuts.
That's not going to exist in the future.
The way it's going with social media and why it's so important that someone like Elon push back, Elon pushed back. I don't think he cares anymore. I don't, I think he's trying to
get away from the whole thing. But the reason why social media censorship is so dangerous,
if the world ended right now, the overwhelming majority of information would be gone.
Like world ending. I mean, if let's say the power went out in every major city,
you would not be able to access our website, timcast.com. I mean, the information
exists on the hardware somewhere. Where's the data center? Who knows? How are you going to look up
the IP address? I don't know. Computer shut down. So if, you know, a hundred years ago, there's a
collapse. Society breaks down. You walk into a library, you find all the books still sitting
there, hopefully not damaged, but these books could be all over the place. You could find the
history and be like, wow, look at this in the future. It's going to
be very different. If there is a major collapse catastrophe like that overnight, no one is going
to know where any of this information is. And if you don't have electricity or a means to decode
the data off the hard drives, you know, there could be a solar flare or a great war. And let's say it's 150 years and people
are looking at these mainframes going, the summation of human knowledge exists on these
machines. It could teach us so much about the world and how to survive, but we can't get access
to it because we lost that technology when the collapse happened. No books, no reading, nothing
you can preserve. Maybe you'll get lucky and someone will figure it out. Anyway, I bring that
up because the way it's going with censorship, that idea I had for a show, it's like the reason there was
a last city, because those are the people who weren't allowed in. These are the descendants
of the people who were banned from the metaverse and had to go and build their own economy
somewhere else. So what I see happening with censorship, you're going to have people who
get banned and they will find a way to engage in commerce my dystopian future vision of
it is a city of people living you know because their descendants are forced to work and live in
this alternate space and then everyone else lives in the virtual reality but i kind of think that's
a that's one direction we're going in maybe it won't be that bad um the reality of these things
is these predictions typically don't pan out because within 20 years technology will have
changed so much my prediction will make no sense.
But there you go.
Well, have you ever seen the movie Idiocracy?
Yes.
It's one of my favorites.
It actually kind of starts to prove that fact that you have smartphones and dumb people.
And we're not making or doing a service to our young people or to the individuals who just like that easy button.
We're making it easier and easier and easier for society,
and we're telling them that when you fail, it's not your fault.
When you fail, you need to blame everything elsewhere.
That idea of ownership, that idea of wanting to go and read through an encyclopedia to find an answer.
But if I can't find it on the first page of Google know that's what sometimes i'll talk to my younger employees like hey sir you told me to go and research
something so i went on google and i searched and nothing came up like wow and then and then you
came directly back to me that's very sad and but it's it's exactly what you probably have seen
a lot in the say younger generation i i grew up with no phone, then a flip phone. And now I have
a phone, but I despise it. If I can get away from this thing and I can get back into reading books
and engaging in conversation, because that's where real knowledge comes from. That's where it's
debate. You know, it's not reading what someone else posted on Google, right? That Wikipedia,
where anyone can alter it. And people come to me with these facts about masks, about
vaccines. It's funny how when things become mainstream, everyone all of a sudden becomes
a subject matter expert like that. Because they're on the front page of Google, might you?
100%. Yeah. Everything got shut down for COVID, right? I became a non-essential company. So my
company with 250 people was forced to shut down and die. Clothing company?
Yeah.
Clothes are essential, right?
And I had Black Rifle Coffee, which is my favorite coffee.
It's free coffee to all first responders.
But our coffee shops were shut down.
Our retail stores were shut down.
Our manufacturing plant was shut down. What state?
Georgia.
Wow, really?
Yeah, yeah.
And there was definitely some internal politics going on there that caused that.
But I'd say that if I didn't switch and to start distributing these cloth masks that I knew were not effective in any way, shape, or form.
I'm an engineer.
I like making and building things.
We made our own N95 masks, ones that actually worked, that were made here in the United States.
But there's no way we were getting any type of large contracts. You know, they were going to 3M, they're going to Honeywell so that they could take these billion dollar contracts. By the way, they still haven't produced these masks. You know,
500 plus million masks that were given billion dollar contracts. They didn't have to be produced
for 18 months. You know, I bid on them and said that I could do it with my partners at Gulfstream,
my partners that were these NASA based engineering firms that had proven that our science
worked and that it was cheaper, better, faster, made in the U.S., but no one wanted to hear it.
And that's where, you know, that science is overruled by political science. You know,
the math and the numbers and the engineering is no longer a discussion. So I could go on
television and talk about things based on my knowledge of science and engineering
and be challenged by some YouTube dummy who just Googled Fauci's last periodical of nonsense
and said, you know what, you're wrong and you're against the science
and you just want to promote all these negative things and therefore you are are a bad human, and you can't even engage in conversation.
Let's jump to this next story.
What I have before you, my friends, is YouTube's COVID misinformation policy.
The funny thing about this is I'm like, you know, most of the COVID stuff is over.
Like the mandates are mostly over.
The U.S. still require vaccines for entry, but they don't actually check,
so it's actually the airlines who are requiring it.
And then some people, here's a funny thing,
tons of people, everybody who travels knows this,
they're like, you don't fly to
the United States anymore, you fly to Tijuana,
and then walk in. Just walk in.
They don't check, they don't care. It's the weirdest
gap in security and policy or whatever. But anyway,
here's the point. YouTube's
medical misinformation policy, when you scroll down
to prevention misinformation, doesn't mention anything about masks. In fact, I will do this in real time,
control F, and we'll type in M-A-S-K, nothing. The word mask does not appear in YouTube's
misinformation policy anymore. So I tweeted this. YouTube updated its policies to no longer ban
claims that masks do not play a role in preventing the spread of COVID, essentially, you are now allowed to claim masks don't work. So we can see, initially, it used to say this, claims that masks
do not play a role in preventing the contraction or transmission of COVID-19. You are not allowed
to say that. YouTube removed that, and I'm assuming you can now say it. Here's what they say.
I'll let you say it first, because I get all kinds of censorship.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
Period of time in my life.
I'm good.
It says that the Google
misinformation policy,
YouTube's policies on COVID-19
are subject to change
in response to changes
to global or local health authorities
guidance on the virus.
There may be a delay
between new LHA and WHO guidance
and policy updates
given the frequency
with which his guidance changes. And our policies may not cover all LHA and WHO guidance and policy updates, given the frequency with which his guidance changes.
And our policies may not cover all LHA and WHO guidance related to COVID.
You know, this is, this is a serious problem that scientists have been saying this very thing.
And YouTube was banning them. Rand Paul came out, dude's a doctor.
They, they, they gave him a strike on YouTube for bringing this up. If a doctor can't even talk about it, which doctor can? YouTube has arbitrarily chosen
the World Health Organization as their end-all be-all for what is true and correct.
This is extremely dangerous because the World Health Organization is a political entity,
not a medical one. It is a political international entity, not a medical body.
It is not like an academic group of doctors at a university doing clinical trials.
It is a political institution.
And YouTube's like, meh, they'll be the experts.
Do you think that's because they feel like they are obligated to listen to a global authority
because they view themselves as a global platform, even though it's based in the U.S.?
I think for YouTube, it's the easy way out.
Meh, the World Health Organization. They have their pinkies in all these countries. They sound good enough. No, no's the easy way out. The World Health Organization, they have
their pinkies in all these countries. They sound good enough. No, no, no. They actually work with
a bunch of countries. Therefore, it's easier to use them as a standard so that we don't get in
trouble with these other countries. Well, how do we pick our arbitrators for other fact-checking?
You had the, was it the Washington Post? Or not Washington Post, New York Times and other
periodicals that were being sent articles to see if it was political
misinformation, if it was scientific misinformation. It didn't have to just be about masks, but either
you're going to have complete censorship or you have no censorship. And the complete censorship
needs a lot of oversight, and we're not there. And that's the idea that you're not going to have a
platform that's perfect. You know, there's things that we can all agree on that exploitation of
children, violence, extremism in some sort of way of like-
Calls for violence, basically.
Basically calls for violence. Those are generally accepted no-nos. It's when we get into these
gray areas that you take a hard line stance and you ruin businesses. You ruin people's lives.
The problem is some people argue for free speech absolutism, meaning they argue you could call for violence because you didn't actually do anything.
And I get it.
If the idea is we don't allow speech that calls for violence because that's a crime, well, that's not an argument because then all that has to happen is they decide another kind of speech is a crime.
Okay, well, now, you know, insulting someone or using their pronouns is assault or violence.
And thus, now they can say, well, that's not free speech.
You're committing a crime, right?
So there is an issue in at what point does speech become illegal and can it?
And a question of shouldn't it just be on you to defend yourself?
I would think so. But we have seen that it becomes a safe haven, a place where people
can congregate and start creating organizations and a movement of violence and extremism.
And I think it's very similar and has some connotations to Afghanistan.
And people had an argument of we don't need to be there.
There's no objective for us.
But it allowed for a safe haven of horrible individuals to congregate, plan, and execute atrocious acts.
In my opinion, you need to have some oversight.
But it's not living there 24 7 it's pinpoint action taken
towards those individuals i don't i don't think there's a solution at all uh so they want to
censor people because you know people are offensive or whatever we start we all we all agree like hey
don't incite violence don't tell people to commit violence don't tell them how to commit violence
we all agree that's a bad thing the The issue though is now from that point,
they've moved on to the next point, stochastic terrorism. Well, now you're saying things that
will infer the idea or convince someone to go do something. Well, that's calling for violence.
That's where they're at now. And they will eventually ban that. I'm not entirely sure
they can. I'm saying their goal is to get that
kind of speech banned, where if you said something like we should shut that school down because of
the horrible things they do, they say, hey, we know what you're getting at. It's a won't someone
rid me of this meddlesome priest thing. And that's what they're trying to argue now, because people
like James Lindsay and lives of TikTok have been criticizing these these hospitals that have been
doing surgery on these kids. They're saying, oh, that's stochastic terrorism.
And their goal is to rally people to eventually go and do something.
It's like there's no line.
You can keep ramping it up until eventually you've banned all speech.
Just because you're afraid doesn't mean that I made you afraid.
Like just because someone's in terror doesn't mean that someone else committed a terroristic act.
Terror is a very – well, I don't know.
I think it's very hardcore.
I mean if you're making people fear for their life without,
other than words, and in the United States,
it's an imminent threat of violence, not just threats of violence,
not like, hey, go something, something.
It's when you give a date and a time and a place,
that creates an imminent threat, and that is illegal in the United States.
You're allowed to say, like, hey, go fill in the blank.
I'm not talking about YouTube terms.
I'm talking about American civil liberties.
But you cannot call for imminent threats.
I think that social networks that are based in the United States and run in the United
States should follow American law personally.
That's what Mines does.
No, they follow the World Health Organization instead.
Then I think we should take the keys away and maybe free up the space a little bit because private companies should not be getting in the way of the country that helped them create themselves.
And individuals who find themselves wronged in every way, shape, or form.
And there's settings out there.
You can make yourself private.
You can ban everyone from being on your page.
You can just get off of social.
That's one of those things where I'd like to tell people if it's really causing you this much anxiety and this much heartache, one, it might be you. Two, you have
options to just turn it off. It's not that big of a deal. But when we start infringing upon
everyone else's rights just to make you happy, that's where I draw a line. You know, just get
off of social if it's the fact that people aren't addressing you by the right pronouns,
if people aren't addressing you by the right fill in the blank, and now you're on a rampage,
and now it's your social justice warrior, and I have to placate to that, and I don't want to. And that's really what it boils down to is you just do you, let me do me.
And I think if we could ever get back to that point, we would be a much happier society.
But right now we just hone in on the negatives and we try to impose our opinions on other people,
as opposed to saying, hey, you know what? We have a difference of opinion. That's fine. That's why
I like to fight overseas against terrorists who don't allow you to have a different opinion.
You talk about all the bad things here. Go to those other countries where you get stoned to
death if you have intercourse with someone else.
What about the terrorists that are here trying to stop you from being able to say what you want and have an opinion?
And the ones who are running big companies and defending those people?
Those are domestic terrorists, in my humble opinion.
Hopefully that doesn't get me kicked off of more social.
Who are you talking about?
Like when BLM or Antivol show up and throw a brick through your window because you said naughty words.
Yeah, I think they are domestic terrorists.
People that will destroy property and threaten life for a social movement I think are – I would consider them terrorists.
I would consider George Washington a terrorist.
King George did at the time.
Yeah, there was a meme going around where these people were posting like Trump should remember this is what they do to traitors.
And it was a guy being hanged the funny thing though is i was like it was redcoats hanging a minute man a con or not a mini man but continental
army you know you know blue coat and then i was just like this the the treason you're showing was
against the crown like it was the americans being like yo we don't believe in monarchy and so they
said that's treason and these people are sharing that as if like, it's a good thing to uphold.
Because it shows that fighting oppression is no longer the mainstream. It's now,
everyone wants to be subjugated. They want to be told what to do. They want to be told,
you know, that, that everything that's not good with you, everything that's gone wrong in your
life, it's not you. It's not your lack of effort. It's not your work effort. It's everyone else's. And
that we need to take things and give to this group. Yeah, I think that's a slippery slope
that we're headed. Just out of curiosity, were you ever on any alternative platforms like Minds
or Gab or? I don't even know what those are. They're just alternatives to, I don't know, any social media platform or Twitter. No, I'm probably the world's worst on getting on social
and trying to stay engaged. I do try to, you know, connect with my kids, try to connect with my
fan base. But, you know, this is one of those things that's kind of foreign to me. I'm a guy
who'd rather be out in the woods and be completely disconnected from the world.
Let me pull up this tweet here,
and we'll spend some time ragging on Dr. Fauci.
You know, he's leaving, and I'm quite disappointed
because this means I won't be able to do the voice roles
for Freedom Tunes anymore.
But the truth is, Seamus hasn't been calling.
That's right, Seamus of Freedom Tunes.
He hasn't called me to do a voice of Fauci.
Even with the big Fauci news, I get it, Seamus.
But I know what you're here for.
Ian Miles Chong tweeted, Fauci has the Fauci devotional candle on his bookshelves.
You couldn't make this up.
Here's a picture of Fauci.
Here's the bookshelf behind him.
And right here, you can see it.
That's the Fauci devotional candle.
It is an image of Fauci as, like, I jesus is that it let me see yeah that's what those devotional candles are
they're usually a lot of them in south america all right fauci out of the virgin has a devotional
candle of himself depicting himself as as jesus is that what it is well the savior i'm the savior i said you would
buy it you would have you would how many would you buy no just one i don't know would you light it
yeah i said this yesterday but like i kept saying he didn't want to retire because out of vanity
like he retiring means that you're old and that you're like you can no longer work and that's why
his announcement is very much like no no i'm just stepping down to continue to work even though he's like 81 i you know maybe someone
got this candle for him as like a gag gift they were like this is so funny your candle i could
definitely see doing that to someone i know if they were suddenly turned into a devotional candle
but to know that you're gonna have it in the background of your interview to me it's just like
isn't this this is this is a form of narcissism right you see yourself as
a savior and incompetence i think uh it's like nice mix between the two because you're a doctor
but have uh you know no ability to discern science from political science yeah i think you're an
absolute clown so that's perfect i think it was like it's a stereotype for doctors right to have
a god complex and like the entire american media handed this to fauci and we're like no we really could not make it through this pandemic without you sir and i think
it's gone to his head so here check this out ian miles chong posted the photo this is what's behind
him is that who is this if i was fauci i would definitely put that behind me that's hilarious
i wouldn't buy it i don't think but if people sent it to you yeah people sent me stuff to
our appeal box for a while,
and one of them was a shirt with my face on it.
I've worn it on the show.
I think it's freaking hilarious.
It's one of my favorite shirts.
I didn't go out and make it to show everyone, like, hey, look how great I am.
But I'm sure people are sending him tons of stuff, merchandise about him,
and he's just, like, rolling with it.
If anyone made Tim a devotional candle, I would buy it and bring it to you immediately.
I'd love to put one on the table.
I pointed this out because, you know, before the show we were ragging on it.
And then I was like, to be fair, someone sent a golden bust of my face to us.
And it's like sitting on a table downstairs.
And I'm like, I don't know.
Like it came in a box.
Someone else opened the box.
Someone else put it there.
And now there's like this bronze statue of me.
And it's like weird.
I had a headshot that we used for one of our Cast Castle shows.
And it was out in the living room for like a month.
It was just on the table.
And I was like, yeah, everyone get a taste.
Like feel it for like three weeks.
And then it started to feel really weird.
So I took it and put it in my closet.
You hung it up in your room?
Yeah.
I put it behind some things on a shelf.
Are you talking about the painting?
No.
I want to display that.
That thing's hot.
No, it's just a headshot from my college days,
from my Los Angeles commercial base.
Ian has a miniature version of himself on the table right now.
Yeah.
So this is another example of it.
This is right here.
This is Ian Crossland, bobblehead, someone made.
Thank you so much.
I didn't make it, but someone sent it to me.
And it would almost be like an insult not to display it at that point.
See, that's the thing, right?
I remember when the photo went viral of Fauci in his office.
He's got a painting of himself.
And then everybody was like, he works under a painting of himself.
And then we had someone on the show and they were just like, his daughter probably painted it for him.
And then I was like, oh, that's a good point.
Yeah, that's why he would put it up.
With the candle, it totally could just be a gift, right?
Someone was like, this is hilarious.
I will get this for you.
But I don't know.
I guess he has just like really lost my respect and any of my –
Wait, you respected him?
No, I never respected – he never earned my respect, I guess is what I should say.
It's hard really not to see this as him –
like it's hard to imagine that he doesn't look at that every day and think like,
I am really saving America. You know what I mean like did you see the long flowing hair right you guys would
laugh at yourself with your bust and your t-shirts and like you're humble so there's there's an
element to it but like i don't know if that's how fauci views this candle did you see the video
clip of him i did a i did a great twitter troll he was quoted as saying that he was like inspiring
people it was the fauci effect and
that he in this time of of untruth he represented truth and science something like that yeah so i
quoted it directly and then under the tweet was like oops can't forget the video and then i was
like we're gonna separate the men from the boys here and see who actually read the twitter thread
and understood it was a quote or who just blindly was like, I can't believe Tim Pool said this about himself.
But then Jack Pacific was on that night and he was like, oh, I didn't click through.
Oh, the video.
Like, he totally got it afterwards.
But I didn't know Jack fell for it.
One of the boys.
I mean, that's what I remember him saying.
Somebody can clip it, I guess.
But yeah, I remember you doing that.
I mean, I just think that like Anthony Faucici is an arrogant person and so if it were someone
who had humility i would laugh at this candle but it is like hard not to be like come on guy you
couldn't clear your bookshelf at all i i have tasked with saving people's lives and he's a bit
of a megalomaniac i think at the very least that's saying goes without saying a bit of one the way he
talks about himself as a savior is a little crazy. Look at these photos, okay?
This guy, Abhi Cole, he's got the devotional
Fauci candle. This guy,
this lady, Julie Pfeiffer, she's got one.
Here's another Fauci devotional
candle with a mask next to it and
a cork. It's freaking insane, too.
If there is anything
that makes me want to just
buy a van
and go live down by the river and never think of any of
this political stuff again is this these these people are serious guess what they vote yeah well
i've seen these devotional candles for like snoop dogg and martha stewart and some other people
this t-shirt company uh in dallas that he's like sold them to it's just like in our culture with
the weird adoration for dr anthony fauci when they tried to like make
him like a like pop cultural influence like it it's not good i think part of it is like we lost
ruth bader ginsburg and so we needed some other like older new yorker that we all were obsessed
with and like they just couldn't make anthony fauci work i don't know it just creeps me remember
cuomo sexual oh Oh, yeah.
That was horrifying.
What is wrong with these people?
Cultists.
It's all around, man.
Zelinsky, they worship the president of the United States.
They worship him when he gets the job.
Like, all of a sudden, now he's something.
And worship is a great word for it.
Like, it has to be more than just like, oh, I respect your work.
Or he's got some good points.
It's like weird devotion.
Say what they say.
Do not question them.
Like, these are the icons that they're trying to prop up for themselves, which is very strange.
It's creepy.
It's creepy.
It's a creepy bunch of people in a cult and they're all voting.
So you better go out and tell all your friends to go vote.
Does Nine Lives sell devotional candles?
We've not gotten into that market.
I think I might skip that one.
Why?
Really?
I mean, I can use your
face as a model. I feel like you're more Jesus-y
with that flowy...
You have all the rights.
Is that an adjective?
It's all you. Anyone that wants to make t-shirts
with my face on it, they're all you. Make as much money
off them as you want. I'm going to make tens of dollars.
It's going to be great. You know, the cult's getting bigger.
Or maybe it's not.
I don't know. What do you guys think?
I feel like Liz Cheney, she's out.
We got a primary tonight.
I think they're getting louder, not bigger.
I think that sometimes with Colts, like when they become stressed in some way,
the people who are really devoted double down
and the people who are like on the outside already sort of feel like,
I don't know if I want to leave, and they back out.
Even now, like I got employees that work for me, especially in leadership. We don't always see the
same, you know, same eye to eye. And I know people voted for this. And whenever they're
complaining about the gas prices or not being able to hire people or all of these things that
you voted for, I kindly remind them like, you did this this. This is your fault. And they did exactly
what they said they're going to do. We had a previous president said, I'm going to build a
wall, reduce energy prices, do this, do that. He had a playbook and he went and executed on it.
Not everything went according to plan. Not everything went as stated, but that was his
intention. And he went to work day one, day one,
they destroyed energy prices and energy is tied to absolutely everything that we have to deal with and transportation and goods. And, you know, it talked about inflation. It was day one. How do
we create this socialist society without going through Congress? And they did it. You want $15 an hour? No problem, because everything costs $15 now.
So I got to pay someone who was being paid $10
to catch a t-shirt at the end of a dryer,
is now being paid $15.
Now that manager who was $15 is now $20,
and now everyone else is $25.
And guess what?
You only want to spend so much on a USA Made t-shirt, right?
But there is no incentive to buy things in the U.S., and there's no disincentive to import stuff from china so when i sell people that my competitors
are using slave cotton like literally slave cotton and they're illegally putting into their garments
and then they're selling it at a price point i can't match because i don't have any slaves in
georgia that's hundreds of years ago and freaking wrong. Well, I got to be honest. I'm pretty sure
this shirt is probably like
Bangladesh or something. I could tell you that
my stuff's not. I could tell you that
there's a price
point associated, right? So I want cheap
that's good. And I want it all done here in the United
States. Well, that's not a thing. You can
put your money where your mouth
is. You can vote with your dollars. And that's
what I've been trying to tell people is that when you're sitting up on stage and you're talking about all of these
values that you are concerned about, you know, your social justice warriors out there, then why
are your products that you're wearing literally made by slaves? Why are the things that you're
purchasing going to regimes that hate us and want to destroy us?
These are regimes like the Chinese communist government.
Not Chinese people.
I have lots of Chinese friends.
Don't confuse the two.
The 6% ruling class of China that rules with an iron fist, that has zero regard for human rights, that has zero regard for anything other than world domination, and I don't care what anyone else has to say.
That is what they want. You know,
this is an organization that has said recently that they've won the war without firing a shot
because they look at economic warfare as warfare. They look at biological warfare as warfare.
So if COVID was not the perfect test run of biological warfare, and I'm not a conspiracy
theorist, I'm just saying it was a absolute biological agent that wreaked havoc on the world except for one country, which has seemed to benefit very, very much so.
We are living blindly, and we're putting our money and we're voting with our dollars towards organizations that support China, towards organizations that support slavery.
And anyone who wants to talk about that gets censored. I made a USA Made shirt video today
talking about our cotton made in the U.S.,
our cotton and sewing made in the U.S.,
our printing in the U.S.
when people are out there saying,
hey, you can't make things in the U.S.
I can do it.
I'm a freaking aviator.
I have zero knowledge in textile manufacturing.
But the last 10 years, we figured it out.
We're Americans.
We can do this better, cheaper, faster.
But no one cares.
So when the President of the United States goes on television and says they're in the state of the union, we're going to encourage and make sure that everything's made in the U S not one
piece of legislation is to stop any type of imports of textile goods that can be made here,
especially from China. Not one piece of legislation that gives credits towards R and D research and
development for manufacturing capabilities like ours.
So I can't get any type of credits for my employees I hire.
I can't get any credit for the R&D that I do, and I do a lot of R&D
to be able to try to compete with China.
I have to be more efficient.
None of that.
If I was a tech company, I'd get lots of R&D credits.
I'd pay no taxes.
If I just took all my manufacturing and I brought it overseas,
I'd make so much more profit.
It's incredible.
And apparently no one would care.
So until the United States starts voting with their dollars and understand that that money goes to an organization that most likely influences politics, we're just going to keep doing more of the same. China can't – the Chinese Communist Party can't donate directly to a politician to support them.
But they can hire people to do things who they know will support certain politics, thus giving more economic power to people who will destroy this country.
So we have no insight into China because they have locked it down.
You can't influence their politicians.
You'll go to jail forever in that country.
But do they have politicians?
Or do they just have party members? They do have
party members, but you're not influencing
them. Big Brother is a thing.
Your social, your facial recognition,
you can't leave cities
without social credits. I mean, it is
1984 today.
And these organizations,
China, specifically
the Communist Party, there's nothing
that stops them from espionage, right?
Coming here and learning everything they can and bring it back to their country.
I have intellectual property that I sent to China to make.
I have a hoodie that holds your beer hands-free, right?
So I've got two patents, one on an N95 mask so you can breathe without dying.
It actually works.
Sorry, FDA said I can't say that.
According to all of my FDA tests, it works better than 3Ms, but I'm no longer allowed to sell it because there's no more EUAs, and I just had to eat millions of dollars.
Really?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Wow.
It's a whole different story.
But I like science.
I like engineering.
So I made this patented product where you can hold your beer hands-free on your hoodie, right?
Not as –
Is it like a pocket or something or what?
It's a cool pocket, yes.
You kind of dumbed down my patent, but yes, it's a pocket or something or what it's a cool pocket yes you kind of dumbed
down my patent but yes it's a pocket in your in your hoodie it's an engineering engineered
compartment thank you so much a kangaroo pouch if you will um but i i sent it to china with the
tech pack to have them manufacture this is eight years ago right uh and they gave it to my
competitors and started selling everyone else.
And they told me that they don't believe intellectual property. It's trade secrets.
If it was, if I want to own an idea, man, there's no, there's no patents there. They consider it trade secrets. So once the secret is known, it can be shared with absolutely everyone. As long
as they can make money, they will. So there is no respect for intellectual property. There is
no respect for human life.
And this is an organization that is not our friend.
And they threatened to shoot down our, what, vice president, secretary of defense, sex state?
Who is it they were going to shoot down?
Speaker of the House.
There we go.
Speaker of the House.
So they want to shoot down a sitting member of Congress.
And our response is, please don't do that.
We are a very weak country right now, in my opinion, please don't do that.
We are a very weak country right now,
in my opinion,
because we have weak leadership.
And until that changes,
I don't see us improving.
The midterms are coming up.
I'm pretty optimistic.
I'm not super optimistic about the leadership.
We're going to end up with McConnell
and Kevin McCarthy, so nothing will really get done.
But you'll have some good people in there doing some good stuff.
It's not all bad, right?
Yeah.
I think what we saw when you had Trump come to power, you had a change in politics that shook things up.
It was a time when everyone was tired with the status quo, and they didn't want more of the same.
I think people on both sides are starting to see that again, that going back to traditional
politicians, you get more of the same.
We actually reversed course so fast day one.
And to see the state of the economy right now and to see the state of affairs from a
world stage having traveled a lot into the Eastern European countries
as of late.
We are a joke.
We're a laughingstock.
What do you think about Ron DeSantis?
I would be very excited for a DeSantis ticket.
If our current, I guess, if the Donald were, in my opinion, to support and endorse that person and push the Trump supporters towards him, I think that we actually would have a shot.
You know, conservatives, right?
I'll identify as a conservative.
You know, no other pronouns, just conservative.
And that's not a negative thing.
It just means I'm a fiscal conservative and social
libertarian. I could care what you do with your ding-a-ling. Just don't talk to my children about
it. That's my job. Would you prefer Trump or would you prefer DeSantis? DeSantis, because I think he
has an opportunity to win because I think there's more than, this has nothing to do with the Donald,
right? Now I've gone to Mar-a-Lago. I've met him a few times. He's helped me with getting my friend Eddie Gallagher out of prison. I have no ill will
towards a former president of the United States. What I do have is ill will towards not taking
a stance towards what's the most likely course of action. If he were to run, you're going to
have a lot of individuals, never Trumpers that rally their base to vote against him just because it's him. And that's the unfortunate truth is
that they'll get more people that would have voted conservative to not vote conservative
just because they don't like the orange man. There is a concerted effort in media right now
to go after DeSantis that way. They're actually trying to say that he's worse than Trump because they have to.
They have to.
And it's crazy because they already said Trump was literally worse than Hitler,
and I'm not entirely sure what they're complaining about with DeSantis.
But they just have to say something.
Otherwise, they'll win.
That's their play is that they just say things louder and louder and louder.
My godfather, I loved having conversations with him.
I used to break out a thesaurus. This is Bill Buckley Jr., kind of started the modern
conservative movement. And, you know, he would always tell me that you'll never win an argument
with an idiot. They'll just talk louder. And that's what I find when I try to engage into
a political discussion with someone who is so far left or honestly right it really doesn't matter when you
have extremisms on both parties and you can't um find a way to have a conversation without raising
your voice because we have a difference of opinion on uh women's reproductive rights about the second
amendment about that's all the first amendment but it's i've seen it on both sides too i've seen
people go extremely far right and angry because i don't agree with something to do with women's reproductive rights.
Right. Which I'm not even going to get into that because it's I just don't feel like it's a topic of conversation where you can win.
It's just a difference of opinion. Some people are extremely religious.
Some people are not. And I think that we've degraded our our morals in this country.
And I think that it's become the popular thing
not to go to church. I think it's the popular thing not to have what I would consider old school
morals, right, that are usually faith-based because it's not the cool thing to do anymore.
And actually, Stalin said it best, that they'll never win a war in the United States because of
our moral convictions, because of the fact that we believe in our
country and what it's founded by, and that you can't break that spirit.
And I think slowly but surely we've eroded
the morals of this country. And when I say morals, I mean doing the right thing when no one else
is looking. Well, let's talk about the one person who's done the right thing.
Liz Cheney
no i'm kidding uh we have this story from yahoo news new poll indicates a liz cheney presidential
run would hurt biden more than trump it can be uh simply shown in this chart in this graph right
here if liz cheney were to run as an independent democrats would vote for her helping donald trump
win and based on this polling they're actually saying right now, and this is another, I don't
necessarily believe all this.
They're saying right now, based on their polling data, Joe Biden would beat Donald Trump in
an election if it was held today, or at least at the time of this poll.
Support for Joe Biden, 46%, Trump's 42.
But if Liz Cheney runs as an independent, Joe Biden, 32, Cheney, 11, Trump, 40.
I would be very interested to know what the poll would say if a DeSantis were to run endorsed by Trump and those two.
I think it would be a landslide.
I think he would do very well.
People need to understand, too, landslides, it doesn't mean like 80% of the general public votes for the candidate.
It means like 55% does.
And this results in a massive swing in the electoral college you end up with all the states there's a thing you
know people were saying that trump won in the landslide against hillary he won three states
that got him over and it was by 88 000 votes so that's not a landslide but in the electoral college
it came out to like a you know a decent number of electoral votes that he ended up winning but
the electoral votes are shifting.
New York lost two and Florida gained two.
California, I think, lost one too, right?
Yeah.
When you have these policies that cause a mass exodus of intellectual individuals,
they're going to find refuge.
They are refugees.
That's why I try to tell people when they come from my home state of Connecticut to Georgia or to Florida, like, you are not a prophet.
Please don't come here
with the politics that I left. You are a refugee. They do. And it's worse than that. They bring
other people with them. I haven't really been seeing that in the Southeast. I've been seeing
individuals coming there and acting as refugees saying, Hey, we are here because where I left
is not good. And it's getting worse because what you guys have going on in Georgia and in Florida is better than where I left.
And I don't want to mess that up.
Elon Musk was in California.
People who live in California, two to one, are Democrats.
Elon Musk moves to Texas and opens the Gigafactory.
A lot of these employees, I'm assuming, maybe I'm wrong.
I'm assuming he didn't fire everybody in California, right?
Probably transferred a bunch of them.
That's a bunch of California progressives being moved into Austin. So I do think there are more
refugees than there are people transferring because of work policy. But depending on the
size of the industry and of the individual, they might bring, you know, for every one high net
worth individual who's like, hey, I believe in liberty and freedom, they might bring, you know, for every one high net worth individual who's like, hey, I believe in liberty and freedom, they might bring 10 woke employees with them.
AT&T moved to Dallas, the Dallas area, I think in 2012.
I could be wrong on that.
And they were based in California before that.
So they also transferred their employees out there.
I'm sure some had the option to leave the company, stay.
A lot came to Dallas.
It really blew up a couple of the suburbs in the Dallas area.
And this is prior to Trump being elected.
I mean, the shift towards pro-business states has been going on for a long time.
It wasn't just COVID in politics that started mass migration of people with maybe not the
political leanings of the states they were ultimately ending up in.
I think COVID just made it much more of an intentional choice for some people.
There was much more of an examination of the life you were living
because you were suddenly stuck at home having to reconsider what you really wanted.
Well, look at the flexibility that people were able to gain
once we realized that you could work virtually, right?
So individuals who were working for companies that could now work at home
chose to not live in a degrading society, right?
Meaning the crime is up, the bang for your buck is down, and it only seems to be getting worse.
Those individuals are the ones that I see leaving in mass exodus.
They're not leaving because their business, massive company moved, so they had to move with it.
They're moving because they have the freedom and flexibility to choose to not live in New York
city, to choose to not live in LA. And they've decided, um, that that's not for them anymore,
that they don't want to live in fear of walking down the street and getting mugged and raped
and murdered. Uh, because there's, there's lawlessness in LA. It's like Zombieland.
My manufacturing partners are out there, and when I go out there,
it's just getting worse and worse and worse.
It's straight-up Zombieland.
Yeah.
I remember for a while Maine offered this program where if you were a remote worker,
you could come live in Maine and get, you know,
I don't remember if it was money towards a house or a tax credit or something like that.
Maine has an aging population, and they don't have a ton of industry,
so they really do want remote workers to come in and repopulate, have kids, have young families.
Obviously, Maine is beautiful, lots of outdoor stuff.
There is a reason you would want to be there.
It's just not possible if you can't work there.
And this was way before COVID.
I mean, this was happening, again, I think it was like 2010.
But at the time, there were not as many remote positions as there are now.
I think that we'll continue to see states with low birth rate or older populations trying to incentivize remote workers to come out.
Because, again, if you can work, have a steady job and work wherever you want, you are much more likely to choose a place that's reflective both of your political or ideological values, but also of a lifestyle that you want to live. Delaware figured it out.
Delaware figured a lot of it out. There's a lot of states that drive business away. And it's
really interesting how the economics of this work. If you're an ice cream shop, you register your
business in the state because you're in the the state but if you do national level business why would you not be in delaware that the tax the laws the restrictions the taxes in every state are
are cumbersome so this is why every corporation not literally every but like most of them will
just open up in delaware i think nevada is another one and wyoming is good too but now even
california was leading the charge of how to ruin their online business
and tax income because right now because of recent laws in the last few years uh wayfair versus i
think north dakota oh yeah yeah and there was that title title nine or whatever that thing was so
sales tax is now collected in all 50 states once you hit nexus threshold right so california is
actually one of my largest states right we? We send millions of dollars of product there.
Sales tax, fine.
I collect sales tax, I give it to you.
As of lately, now California is saying, actually, we want a percentage of our income tax as well.
So I'm a Georgia resident.
I pay Georgia state income tax at 7%, which is still higher than zero, which is Florida, right?
I'm sure I could probably find ways around it, and I don't feel like going to IRS jail or getting shot by that dude in the wheelchair. Um, for
whatever reason, the IRS tactical training, I don't even know why they have guns, but okay.
So I have been told now I'm expected according to California to pay taxes as if I was a California
resident, because I, in their mind, I'm a resident.
I have no physical property.
I've never go to the state for more than 24 hours because I hate it.
Not because of the beautiful scenery, just no offense, the people, they're insane.
Well, I mean, the climate's bad too, like they're in a drought.
It's like not going all that well.
The political environment, the discussions, the focus of
their attention on what I consider
silly things. I'm not a big
fan. And I definitely don't want to pay 17%
still tax to a state that
I don't physically go to.
It's my company. And they're saying that all your revenue.
Yes. Yeah. That apportionment of it
gets taxed at 17%.
So obviously I politely declined
and said that according to federal laws is this.
And that will be another Supreme Court ruling to see if we now as Internet-based companies have to start paying these insane taxes.
So I don't even know how that would work.
So I pay 17% tax to California and 12% to New York and all this.
I would have zero dollars left over.
And I don't understand how people don't get business.
I started
my garage. I sold my car to buy my first machine. I sold my house to buy another machine. By the way,
when you're deploying a bunch, no notice, and you have a pregnant wife with two kids and a
Great Danes and you move them into an apartment that does not make- They don't like it? They
don't like that. But it was a sacrifice, right? So we continued to sacrifice and put everything all in. And now I'm at a point where the level of taxes that I pay as compared to Amazon,
I pay tens of millions of dollars more than Amazon has.
And that is absolutely ludicrous.
But it's obvious why.
You will own nothing and you will be happy.
I think that is the plan.
I will always be happy.
And I think that happiness is on you.
We don't do any business with California in any possible way.
It's a strict company policy.
California is state non grata for us, however it would actually be stated.
And we've had people who hit us up and like, hey, we'd love to work with you or like we want to submit an article or we're looking for work.
And I'm just like, as long as you're in California, there's not a conversation to be had.
And to put it simply, California has laws in order to just not run afoul.
We just do not do any operations in any capacity with anyone in the state of California.
Oh, no.
I'm being sued right now by a blind man in New York and another person in California
who's saying that my website is not blind accessible, which it is, by the way, for full
– if anyone who's listening to this and happens to blind accessible, which it is, by the way, for full, you know,
if anyone who's listening to this
and happens to not be able to see,
you can absolutely go to 9lineapparel.com
and it will talk to you just as it's supposed to,
but anyone can sue anyone from those states
and they're very sue, not happy,
but I guess they encourage it.
So I will spend tens of thousands of dollars
on these frivolous lawsuits in California and in New York.
And I won't get a change of venue to Georgia because they know they won't win in Georgia.
And they're just hoping that these midsize companies, they're not going after mom and pop and they're not going after Coca-Cola, right?
They're going to go after individuals that they think have the ability to pay, but they don't have the ability
to kind of fight it out, right? So there's hundreds of thousands of these lawsuits that are allowed.
And all they do is just hurt the bottom line for people like me, who, you know, I don't know how to
get around it. I don't know how to advocate. I don't know how to tell people about it because
like you said, you know, shut down my Facebook account, not national news, go and sue me because a blind person says they tried to go buy something from my website. Um,
not a good news story, but you know, deal with it. And these are the policies that New York
and California are encouraging and they destroy businesses into the point where, you know,
I have another company called hoist that does military hydration uh and they're now telling us that you know the
product is not in compliant with california's blah blah blah blah standards i'm not a lawyer
right well i just have to go get different lawyers to figure out why i could sell to everywhere else
but apparently it's california has a different standard of uh consumables what is it that you're
selling with Hoist?
Hoist is military hydration. So we sell it to the government for, it makes sure our troops stay hydrated. Imagine a drink that I can't say that you were given when you're really dehydrated,
as a medical treatment, rhymes with shmedialyte, but it tastes horrible, right? So it's like that,
but tastes good. So we sell it to the government,
and then we also sell it to now civilian venues
like Publix and Walmart and everywhere else.
But in California, it's getting the same co-packers,
same people who make Coca-Cola products make this product,
but they're not going to go sue Coca-Cola.
They're just going to sue Hoist or companies like me.
It's because of like label.
They want like it to say may have been created in a lab with – may have had access to lead or something like that.
Yes, something.
It's their Title 19 California Act that just came full force a couple months ago.
It's California.
They're going to find some other way to mess with business and then complain that they have no income tax and they're bankrupt and then the
federal government people need to get out of california i did i liked it at first i thought
i had to be there because i was an actor so i thought well it's new york or la this is like
2005 and so i in 2006 i moved to los angeles i was in chicago for a while too and uh i lived
there for five years i got really depressed i didn't like it it smelled the brake dust i don't know what but my hypertension was intense like was up and i left
and then i went back in 2014 15 because i was like well it's la i'm going to give another shot
maybe i'll just but i realized by that point the internet i mean i'm working remote i don't need
to be in la i was on the sixth floor and I didn't drive the second time around, which turned it into
a whole better experience. But still,
it was dirty chaos,
man. You got the ocean.
There's benefits to it. You're right, Ian.
We should just move the show to St. Kitts and Nevis.
We should go offshore.
This show could be done anywhere in the world.
I might start working remotely.
I love your spot. Honestly,
this is middle nowhere.
This is my jam.
You got chickens.
I get anxiety when I'm in New York City, when I'm in L.A.,
when I'm around a large populated area of mostly angry people.
And I understand why you're angry.
I used to have to go to school in New York City.
It took me three and a half hours just to get there
and then deal with very angry people who didn't like my all lives matter
shirts except for isis f those guys like i would wear it all the time you know it was funny but it
was during the whole blue lives matter and black lives matter and all these different lives matter
debates and people just literally would lose their mind and freak out and i'd be walking down the
street with my large female african-amer you know, West Point friend and calling her and Uncle Tom and telling me mean things.
And I'm like, I hate New York City.
I cannot wait to leave.
And I get back to Savannah and it's just Zen.
You know, everyone is very nice.
There's no honking of horns.
There's, you know, it's a different way of life.
The cities are falling apart, man.
They are.
Yeah.
It's because of leadership, though.
Because I'll tell you, New York City wasn't.
Lack thereof.
Giuliani's a friend.
Bernie Carrick, the police commissioner in New York City, is a really good friend.
Under their leadership, during that 9-11, pre-9-11, post-9-11, the crime rates, just
everything about the city was so much better.
And you change that leadership, and you watch what happens.
And it is a direct result of those in charge.
It's not just that.
It's just like, man, I've been really watching it.
Let me jump to this story because this is important.
We have this from The Guardian.
Trump sues U.S. government over FBI search of Mar-a-Lago.
Ex-president seeks to prevent Bureau from reading seized documents until court official weighs in. Well, there's the story. Here's the big important piece.
Alan Dershowitz says every reputable attorney he's spoken with has told him
their firms won't let them go anywhere near Trump. Dude, we can't survive as a country
if this cult keeps expanding and operating this way. this is why I've been talking about why it's so important to build culture and for everybody to start building industry,
parallel economies.
These lawyers are like, I can't, I can't represent Trump, even though Trump's far
from the worst person ever, ever represented in this country.
But they can't do it because they're like, oh, I'll never get a job again.
This means we need lawyers to make law firms that are like, we don't care if you represent
Trump.
The ACLU defended the Klan back in what was the 90s, I think, right?
When they were marching through Skokie, Illinois.
They defended Unite the Right only a few years ago.
And that was a horrifying moment.
Now, the cult has expanded to the point where lawyers aren't working with Trump.
Here's the big thing.
Trump, when he filed this lawsuit, it was pro se.
There were no lawyers signed on to it. It was just Trump representing himself.
Now, I believe some lawyers have signed on and the left is mocking him for it,
calling his lawyers like fly-by-night lawyers. And it's like, this is a bad thing.
But if you're in the cult and you're psychotic, it's a good thing. You're a communist. Everybody
has to fall in line and march in lockstep. It's good that no one will represent your enemies.
If we carry on down that path, I mean, you all know where this ends up.
Gestapo.
I always joke around like it's step one, control the narrative, right?
And we've seen it in the history playbook.
Burn the books that are against your narrative.
Control the media.
Control the news.
Much easier back in the 40s.
And step two, just I don't need to take the weapons right now. I just didn't know
where they are. Just register. I might need to take certain ones and eventually I'm going to
take all of them. And then after that, step three is do whatever the heck you want. There's no
stopping you. And I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but I know that I have weapons that are for hunting and I have weapons for defending my home.
And I have sworn allegiance to protect and defend this country against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
And there are certain inalienable rights that I will not give up.
And you will have to pry things out of my hands before you come to my house and you mess with my children.
You want to jab them with certain things that you say are healthy
and they're not going to cause them to have major heart problems?
I'm going to say good luck coming to Savannah, Georgia,
opening up my door and sticking something into my children.
That's not going to work out well.
That's not violence, by the way.
I was just saying.
It's the spirit of American freedom is the point of it.
Let me ask you a question.
What's a 450 Bushmaster round four?
Are you familiar?
Do you know your guns?
I'm not trying to put you on the spot.
I'm trying to make a point.
Yeah, so I'd say I have everything from a.50 cal down to.22s and every single –
What's the purpose of a.450 Bushmaster?
Let's say polymer tip,.450 Bushmaster.
You tell me at this point.
So again, I'm not trying to put you on the spot.
Hunting, right?
Big game.
You get maybe like four or five rounds in the magazine, I think.
So I don't hunt.
I'll be clear.
I shoot targets.
Right, right, right.
I'm one of those guys.
I don't believe in killing things except for bad humans.
So my point here is that's a weapon for hunting animals, right?
What would you say like a birdshot is for, you know, a 12-gauge birdshot?
Birds?
Birds, yeah.
What's a Barrett M82A1 for?
50 BMG.
Humans?
Tanks?
Bad humans? Helicopters? Yes. uh the thing about that is you can buy one
this is america and so i've seen these conversations and it's funny because
what do you think would happen i mean what how do you think the left would respond i mean they'd
lose their minds just knowing that you would buy such a weapon they would argue that the fact that
you'd have the conversation about it
would be incitement to violence or insurrection
because there's not a hunting purpose,
technically, for a.50 BMG.
It's like an anti-material rifle
for taking out tanks and things like that.
Yeah, well, I still have access
to.240 Bravo machine guns
on the side of Little Bird helicopters
that fly around my house,
and it's Georgia again.
Yeah, you've got the wild boars, you know. I've the undertake on the side you know shooting machine guns and just shooting targets because
it's america you know because we can and because we're not bothering anyone and i i don't i don't
understand this uh concern of the far whatever the anti-gun that is so hell-bent on taking them all away
when they've never gone to the countries
where they were taken away,
where they currently are taken away.
In Ukraine, for example,
they were all taken away
and they were all handed back out
because guess who was coming?
The Russians, right?
And you know what sucks?
The Russians came and they didn't have guns.
And they had no guns.
Apparently, Zelensky knew they were coming.
Did you guys see Jimmy Dore talking about that today?
No.
Apparently, Zelensky knew the Russians were going to attack, but he didn't tell anybody
because he didn't want to take their money out of the bank.
He didn't want to crash the Ukrainian government.
But everybody knew it was happening.
They were-
It was pretty obvious.
They had troops gathered on the border.
Our president knew.
Right, right, right.
Our president pulled our elements out.
Our president could have done a lot more.
They could have done a no-fly zone before there was a war.
It would not have been an act of war to declare a no-fly zone on Ukraine by the United States.
I'd say our president did the – or sorry, not our president.
Somebody during the Afghan evac put a no-fly zone for evacuating aircraft, right?
That's weird.
State Department, six aircraft trying to pull out
American hostages.
What do you call it, Ian, that Joe Biden did in Afghanistan?
The surrender? The surrender.
Yes.
Anyway, I want to go back to this story a little bit.
Basically, though, our country
in terms of the military
capabilities
and the individuals that
are out there willing to do bad things to bad
people and they are willing to lay down their lives to do so. They wanted to go and rescue
our U.S. citizens that were left behind in Afghanistan. They wanted to go and provide
aid to the individuals who are fighting against Russians and give them the capability to defend their own country at a time
of need. But we actively prevented those things. It's not that we stood by and just watched things
happen. We actively put a RAS around six aircraft in Mas al-Sharif when I was trying to pull people
that were American citizens out of Afghanistan, right? That actually happened firsthand knowledge.
We actively said that the Russians are going to take over this country.
There's nothing we can do.
Pull everyone out.
Don't give them any aid.
No support.
World stage.
The NGOs of the world are the ones that actually prevented World War III from occurring, my humble opinion.
I think the history books will see it that way too because now everyone and their brother pours money, which is wasted.
All that funds is squandered waste none of it's going to where it actually is
supposed to go and i'm boots on the ground there i can tell you firsthand knowledge i want to i want
to jump back to the story though because the the main point that i think we need to pay attention
to is you know within the past couple of days we're hearing that donald trump can't get a lawyer
then we're seeing he files a lawsuit pro se so he's got to try and find somebody to sign on. Then the left mocks him over it. This is,
man, this is very, very serious in terms of culture war and leading up to either.
Look, civil war is actually a very optimistic concept. Civil war means that there's a chance
at preventing totalitarian takeover.
Because the reality is you look at Weimar Germany
or you look at pre-communist Russia,
and it was no civil war, it was revolution.
And revolution resulted in the Nazis and the Soviets.
So if in the United States there isn't a civil war,
that would just mean these people have taken over.
Well, you could have a civil war that turns into a revolution, too.
You've got to be careful about unleashing the beast.
Yeah, but typically what we see with like right in Weimar Germany, you had the communists and the fascists.
They were fighting and the fascists win.
But it wasn't like a civil war necessarily.
It was political conflict, kind of like what we see here.
And so that's that's the thing I think people need to pay attention to.
They're like, oh, we're not on track for a civil war. We're just seeing
political violence. And it's like, yeah, you're seeing political violence. You're seeing the
weapons weaponization of the DOJ against the former president and his, and his administration.
You're seeing him unable to get a lawyer from any firm and being made fun of for it. I'm like,
yeah, that's kind of like pre Nazi Germany, pre Soviet Russia level stuff. So,, OK, maybe maybe these people are happy that there won't be some kind of civil war.
And I think in a certain sense, that sounds good, doesn't it?
No civil war.
The problem is what they're actually talking about is violent revolutionary takeover, genocide, murder, et cetera.
It seems like that we're on track for globalization somehow that we have been for probably 20 30 years, and that I was very anti-nationalism for 15 years ago.
I was like, screw the U.S.
Why?
This war in the Middle East, because the war in the Middle East was insane, unfounded.
He lied to get us in.
George Bush lied to get us in and killed all these people and destroyed infrastructure.
I was so fed up with the nationalist powers being like, my country is better than your country,
when it's like, dude, we're all humans sharing the planet together.
Let's work together as a species.
Let's create a language, create a currency, and move on.
It's very naive.
And so a decade later now, I'm looking at how dangerous globalism can become
because the American experiment is phenomenal objectively from –
well, I can't be objective about it, but it's pretty cool.
Most people on Earth seem to think it's pretty cool, this sense of freedom that we have.
And if the global – if the World Economic Forum and the Bank for International Settlements gets to dispense with nationalist governments and create like a corporatocracy, we're screwed.
That's not good.
That's a lack of freedom.
I don't want –
But they keep trying.
And I think it's inevitable that we will globalize somehow.
I'm imagining.
It's just anyone that talks about the end
of the liberal international economy,
they say that it's ending.
So there's going to be a new
international economy. There's going to be a new world order.
What's it going to be? I used to hate
the World Economic Forum and Klaus Schwab. I don't even know
the guy, but now I realize I want to talk to him
because they want sustainability.
They don't want to kill everyone. They want
to do something good.
But like you said earlier, good can be twisted.
I don't know if I agree with you, Ian.
You said they don't want to kill everybody.
And I would say technically correct.
Maybe they don't want to, kind of like,
I don't want to have to go and kill all the deer
when their population has expanded too rapidly, right?
Just collateral damage.
You don't want to kill all the deer
because then they're all gone and they're extinct.
No, the issue is, you know, what we see from a lot of global elites when they're saying things like
the best thing you can do for the environment is not have kids.
That's the very nice way of saying they don't want your family to expand.
They don't want you to be here, okay?
So, look, we know because we have a chicken city.
It's stinky because we had too many.
So we had to take a bunch of the boys and send them over to Cocktown, which is where all the boys go.
Because when the chicken boys are around each other, they don't fight.
But when you put a girl in there, they start fighting.
So we had to separate them and create two different little chicken towns, chicken cities.
The smell was getting really bad because the chicken crap couldn't get washed away fast enough.
I recognize that as someone who is literally, you know, we have our own chicken coop.
But we also know that with deer, for instance, if their population isn't kept in check,
they start decimating local plant life and causing ecological problems.
So then humans go out, kill a bunch of the bucks, get the population down and under control.
Humans are not exempt from these concepts. Now, there are a lot of people who think overpopulation is a problem.
That's kind of the issue. There are a lot of people who think that overpopulation is not a
problem. Maybe it will be soon. Either way, these World Economic Forum people, these global elites,
they think it is a problem. And if you look at how we deal with invasive species of any other species, why do you think that these
global elites would treat humans any differently? Now, I will say, because they're humans,
which is why the approach is stop having kids, live in luxury, birth control. They're trying
to stop human reproduction because then naturally what happens is the population slowly dies and
then it
contracts and shrinks down, and that's one way to control population expansion.
So my clarification, yeah, you're right.
They don't want to go around and just kill people, but they certainly don't want people
to be alive anymore in certain numbers.
I think they want not feces on the streets of New York.
They want not so many people in San Francisco that they're clogging the system, like what
you're saying about the chicken poop, which is happening in L.A. and in New York.
There is a clog right now.
There's too many people in a centralized area.
Cities maybe are fading away.
I don't know.
The problem is you need electricity to get from place to place or gas power.
Maybe.
And that's a luxury.
Maybe what we've got to do is take all the boys from San Francisco
and send them to their own human cock town where all the boys can hang out like we do with Chicken City. I think they'd like that. Yeah, I don't think it would be a luxury. Maybe what we got to do is take out a boys from San Francisco and send them to their own human cock town where all the boys can hang out like we do with chicken.
I think they'd like that.
Yeah, I don't think it would be a problem.
So I think maybe humans are misappropriated on Earth that we're all stuck in these mega.
But then the idea of like creating mega cities is a world economic.
I think that's an economic forum concept.
By 2030, they want mega cities, which doesn't make sense.
Well, it allows you to control people way, way better.
And the idea with mega cities is that it keeps humans away from the environment.
So there's less of an impact on external systems, on the ecosystems or surrounding areas.
And there can be harmony and you isolate humans in certain areas.
I actually think the opposite is better.
I think we'd be better off with humans spread out quite a bit more.
Oh, we need to evolve our postal service.
This is something I've been thinking.
We can evolve the U.S. Postal Service into a stratospheric drone delivery program where we can ship stuff all over the planet.
I think that would be a cool American initiative.
I think what's going to happen is they're going to increasingly digitize reality.
Like I was already mentioning earlier in the show, if the collapse happened today and the power went down, we would have, the news would be gone.
Like news archives would be gone.
You'd have no way to boot up the internet.
It would just be dead servers.
Maybe you got a solar generator in your house.
Congratulations.
You can power your stove.
You can power your air conditioning.
And you got no access to information because those data centers are all down.
Have you backed up Wikipedia onto your phone?
I'm not saying Wikipedia is a great, you know, unbiased system, but there's a lot of articles
on Wikipedia that are like, this is what an edible flower looks like or something like that.
Have you downloaded survival guides? Have you downloaded encyclopedias in general? Put them
all on your phone right now. Like seriously, it's not that hard to do a thing. It's like six gigs
for the summation of Wikipedia. And of course, a lot of the political stuff is very biased,
but there's a lot of stuff on there that's, you know, might end up helping you in the long run when you're like looking up, you know, drug molecules or
how currents work or something like that, electrical currents. If the power goes down,
you might have power, but we lose access to the grid. So here's what I think. I bring that up
because it's the direction we're going in. And that's why I said my idea for a show was people living in pods, living in the metaverse, and never coming outside because they don't need to.
The Matrix is seemingly the end conclusion of where we're all going.
How do you stop overpopulation?
Put them in the pods.
Put them in the Matrix.
How do you stop this mass pollution and humans crapping on the streets?
Put them in the pods.
Put them in the Matrix.
How do you deal with crime?
There won't be crime if people are locked in pods eating bug mash hooked into their feeding locking people in pods
is a crime yes against humanity in the metaverse and they're going to choose to do it they're going
to get neural linked and they're going to live in some virtual reality where they're superheroes and
they're not going to care that's so they want to put people in mega cities and then put them in
the internet so that we're spread out in the internet i put that in quotes spread out uh
virtually um but that maybe humans are a virus that are spreading out of control on the planet and then put them in the internet so that we're spread out in the internet. I put that in quotes, spread out virtually.
But maybe humans are a virus that are spreading out of control on the planet, maybe.
We've almost eradicated what percent of animal wildlife has gone extinct under our watch?
90 plus percent of the animals on Earth?
I don't know about that. What's the number?
We're in a mass extinction of that right now.
Not everybody agrees. Oh, interesting. Okay, I've heard that then. I've heard the word. What did you say? I're in a mass extinction of that right now. Not everybody agrees.
Oh, interesting.
Okay, I've heard that then.
I've heard the word.
What did you say?
I'm going to have to Google it.
Okay, yes, yes.
Google a verb now.
Google a verb now.
So that argument that humans are just an out-of-control bacterium spreading and consuming everything on Earth,
I've thought about that a lot.
I like to think that I'm in this individual wondrous, you know, that I should have my own spirit candle. But these are policies that were enacted in certain
countries like China, where they had population control, where they have people in megacities
that they can track their whereabouts, where if you want to leave those megacities, you have to
have credit system put in place. Like there are this experiment that you're talking about is going
on right now.
And it's a direction that I don't want us to go in.
And by the way, that when that's the bubble is getting so big, it's either about to burst or it's about to split into two bubbles.
And we're going to colonize Mars.
Think about this.
So the way social media censors people, the powerful elites or whatever politicians would prefer it if we lived our lives in a metaverse virtual world as opposed to the real world.
Because the only thing you can do is what they tell you you're allowed to do.
You say a naughty word, they click a button, and then all of a sudden your mouth in the metaverse is gone.
And now you can't say naughty words anymore.
And then the next generation won't even know what naughty words are.
Or they just control the individuals that are out there that you follow i mean the rock was paid three million dollars to go talk about
how much he loves covid vaccines and so did a bunch of other politicians john cena did that
apology in in mandarin remember that so i mean we're we're paying with our tax dollars my my
money that i work really hard for that they've absolutely just taken at the end
of the year is goes to these high net worth individuals that don't really need money that
have a massive following you know sheep that are following them saying hey don't forget forget to
go get your second third fourth fifth booster and wear six masks and you know i do it so you should
do it they don't do it and they're just getting paid. Money is what's driving this.
In New Jersey, when the lockdown started,
there was a woman live streaming her store's products
and the cops came and shut her down.
You couldn't even sell things online.
It was not, they were, it was just,
I can only say that was about
shutting down economic activity.
And what did the New York Times say?
The earth is healing.
So you look at the, it's
fascinating because actions speak louder than words. And they can come out and say they want
to do whatever they want to do. I don't care what these people say. You know, I learned this lesson
a long time ago. People say they want to do a lot of things and they don't do them. They'll be like,
man, I really want to go travel the world. I had a buddy and he was like, man, I really want to
travel the world. You know, like i really want to go to
bali and i was like okay so go he's like i can't i was like why not he's like i can't afford to go
to bali dude and then i pulled up my phone and it was 400 for a ticket i was like bro round trip 400
bucks did you even look i mean it's like three months out you got to buy it early and he was
like what no and i'm like you never even looked like don't come to me and tell me you want to do
something you never even bothered to google it that's the that's the perfect example of i i I had an individual I went to West Point with that hit me up saying all kinds of critical things, talking about how he would be doing so much more if he had the opportunities or the access to funds.
The privilege.
The privilege, right?
That you did.
And it's, hey, I would do a lot more with the charitable stuff.
Well, actually, you don't know what I do with charity, and I'm involved with this and this and this and this.
But I just kind of wanted to go down that rabbit hole like why why is it that you can't give back to society why don't have the
money is like you don't have any money you don't fine if you have no money do you have time do you
have time to spare because the individuals that go and say hey i really wish i could give back to
our homeless population like there's a thousand different opportunities to do so.
Just go do it.
It's,
it's the individuals that just want to go and say,
I think that someone should fix the homeless population.
I would do it if I could,
but you know what?
You know what?
You can't,
you can't,
no,
you can't,
you can one at a time.
You can,
you could put an effort towards making a,
a,
a individual put your time and energy into helping an individual who wants to be helped.
You're never going to help an individual who doesn't want to be helped.
And that's the point.
Most homeless people don't want to be helped.
I work with homeless veterans.
That's what our charity does.
We build houses for homeless veterans.
So I'm very tied into that specific.
But I would say that you have habitual homeless that are at that they
have not hit that rock bottom where they they find the overwhelming majority of homeless people
in you know the the shelters that i worked with refuse shelters refuse to be involved and have
chosen to be homeless and they won't even take like the stuff that the groups i worked with
talked about is like you could go to them and be like, can we just give you something?
Say, get away from me.
I don't want your stuff.
And these organizations lie.
I mean they were – it was also – it's also crooked, man.
That's the problem is when you have these negative – because homeless individuals, they do talk.
They're not going to want to go back to the same place that talks about trying to help, but they don't. And wraparound services are a thing, and not like to make this a long, long, long story, that the individuals that have hit rock bottom that do
want to get helped, if there are organizations that put their money where their mouth is,
you see a change. In Savannah, Georgia, our homeless population is not completely under
control, but so much better than other cities. And it's because we have a community where we
have the police, the fire, the mayor, for-profits, nonprofits, all working together as a continuum of care saying, hey,
how can we help fix this together? And we start chipping at it. How do you eat the elephant one
bite at a time? And we've been able to take massive improvements and we see it every single
year, but it's a lot of work and it's a lot of individuals, time, money, and effort.
But yeah, it is much easier to say it's never going to be fixed. I give up. Who cares? And move
on. There is a better system than what's going on in LA, what's going on in New York. And it does
take a community to come together and make this initiative, not about themselves, not about how do I raise money and look cool on stage.
And then after the charity event, I go back to my normal day and I never go and deal with
one homeless shelter, one homeless person again.
You know, that that's where the authenticity comes in.
Are you doing the right thing when no one is paying attention or are you doing it just
for the social, uh, what do they call it?
Virtue signaling. the social, what do they call it, virtue signaling? I think a really good example of, for one, I would say, first, truth is hard to come
by.
Some things are objectively true.
Some things are hard to break down because the issues are so complex, you can't possibly
see every angle of every story.
And so when it comes to complex political issues, everybody is saying, like, this is
what's happening, this is what's happening. And they're all looking at a piece but not the whole, and that's a challenge.
When it comes to something like 2 plus 2 equals 4, there are people lying, saying 2 plus 2 is actually 5, and they're trying to pass that off with their weird dialectic garbage.
It's new math.
Yeah, new math.
But for most people, you can understand a simple concept like 2 plus 2 is 4 and why.
But for truth, it's very, very difficult when it comes to doing good things.
I find that like, uh, here's a really good example. I've always heard we want to feed the
homeless. You ever hear that? Yeah. Yeah. People are trying to feed the homeless. And I was always
confused by that. You know why they're homeless. They, they have. They don't have homes. No one mentioned anything
about food. In fact, I've seen tons of fat homeless people. So I would always hear this
from a lot of the activists that I'd work with. They'd be like, we want to do a food for the
homeless thing. And I'll be like, are homeless people hungry? And they're like, I don't know.
And I'm like, shouldn't you home the homeless and feed the hungry? But there's these ideas
that people have, misconceptions.
I was playing guitar on the subway in Chicago once.
I had a $300 fiberglass Stratacoustic.
Just came out back in the time.
This is almost 20 years ago.
And this lady comes up to me and she goes,
there's a shelter on Belmont.
Do you need a place?
And I was like, lady, I make 40 bucks an hour.
And she went, what?
And I was like, I have a fiberglass guitar. Like, I appreciate you're trying to be nice, but like, I was like wearing jeans and a t-shirt and playing music. I wasn't homeless, but they don't understand.
They don't know. People think they know. And I think I, you know, I, I, uh, this woman was very,
very nice. You know, I was deeply touched that she wanted to help, but she didn't know what she was
talking about. And she made a bunch of assumptions and thus didn't actually end up helping anything.
I think there's a lot of people who feel that way, like I'd like to feed the homeless.
And I'm like, that's really, really awesome.
But we need people to actually sit down and figure out what the problems are and not just try and throw pie at the wall because it sounds like the right thing to do.
One problem in California is that there's like a billion-dollar industry to help the homeless.
But the thing is they don't really want to end homelessness
because then the industry is gone.
Joe Rogan has been talking a lot about this.
He's had guests on that are talking, the experts in this.
So they want to continue to have homeless people,
so they keep getting their billions every year to keep their jobs,
like their middle management jobs and things, which is absolutely, I mean,
arguably atrocious.
I mean, if you ever have to deal with HUD
and you have to deal with the bureaucracy
between taking government money to deal with the homeless,
then you start realizing why it's never being fixed, right?
So if I try to create a program, which we have,
which is how do you have housing first, right?
Not housing only.
So I have tiny homes that gets people off the street,
gets them put into an individual house.
From there, they get taught aquaponics from Georgia Southern Partnership, right, with education.
So they have a new sense of pride that they could accomplish something.
And then we give them job placement, right?
So you go from housing first, then some type of trade craft, then an employment opportunity.
Now you cycle that person out and you fill that house with the next person.
It's a triage, right?
When I tell people it's a triage,
they get really mad, right?
Especially the bleeding heart leftists
that have no intention of actually fixing anything.
They just want to tell me how I'm doing it wrong.
So it's, hey, why are you only taking these people?
Is it because you're racist?
Like, actually, I don't look at anything
other than a specific questionnaire
that has to do with their military records.
But that is racist to them because you're supposed to discriminate.
I guess I'm doing it right wrong then?
It's just funny because when you have people who want to go and tell you how you're doing it wrong and you ask them, how many times have you gone and walked underneath the bridge and talked to these individuals?
How many times have you actually sat down and said, how did you get here and how can I help you?
There's so many different situations and that's where it says like, it depends. Politics, a perfect example with, with homelessness, right?
This is, it's actually, you know, you're giving me an idea. We could solve our security issues
in the swattings by just lining the property with tiny homes and letting, you know, and helping the
homeless being like, we got a place for you. We're going to teach you how to use it, give them a nice
place to live. And then you've got this like community and then
you're just in the middle and they're, you know, your perimeter. So you want me to fast forward
to tell you what, what actually happened a couple of years later with once the city got involved
with my first project. Yeah. What did they do? They made it so much better. They got rid of all
the things that we were doing that were successful and made it permanent housing and they allowed
camps all around it. And right before the elections, they paid for everyone to get food and pizza
and told them how when they help support the new president coming and getting elected, right,
because they allowed them to go register all together in Georgia, right,
a huge swath of homeless population in Atlanta and Savannah and other metropolitan cities.
You had these organizers going to these camps and telling people, a huge swath of homeless population in Atlanta and Savannah and other metropolitan cities.
You had these organizers going to these camps and telling people,
hey, you're homeless because of these bad policies,
not the people who are trying to help you right now.
We're going to do so much better.
So here's how you register.
Just use this address, even though that's illegal,
but just all you guys use this one address, not yours.
And then we'll come back and we'll make sure that we take you guys to go get, you know, vote properly. And here's some food.
And here's a new tent.
And here's all that.
They come out of the woodwork right before, weeks before.
And then as soon as the election's over, like a fart in the wind.
Nowhere to be found.
False hope is like blasphemous in my opinion.
But guess who will be out there right before the midterms?
Same group of community organizers telling me that I'm a horrible person, doesn't know how to solve this problem, but they're going to come in last minute,
give some people some pizza, right?
What did they say?
Give a man a fish, feed him for a day, teach him a fish.
They don't want to teach you how to fish.
They don't want to teach you how to become independent.
They have created a new modern slavery where if you have an individual who is so dependent on you,
right?
I need this government housing.
I need this government credit card for food.
I need this government cell phone.
By the way, I get my real money through cash or some type of illicit means,
so I don't declare income.
But I'm so dependent on this awesome group that's giving me all this free stuff.
That's how I need to vote.
And it gets ingrained in their mind that they have to vote for the left so they can keep getting these free
things as opposed to vote for the organization that wants to empower you that wants to make it
so that you have a sense of purpose and can generate revenue on your own and live on your own
who was that guy who said um something about democracy will end when politicians discover
they can simply pay people to vote for them through the government coffers or something like that?
That's exactly what we're doing.
You've heard that, right?
Yeah, recently.
I mean, I heard it recently.
Yeah, he was like, once politicians realize they can just bribe the population with their own tax money, then...
But how are we not doing that?
That's literally what's happening.
They're saying like, we'll take the money that everyone's giving us and then give it to you.
No, I'm going to give you $500.
Don't pay attention to 3M.
I gave them $3 billion.
Don't pay attention to my other buddy over here at SolarCity.
I gave them trillions.
But I gave you $500.
Remember that?
By the way, $500 will buy you two tanks of gas at this
point in time. That's us too. But don't remember, don't forget that we gave you 500 bucks.
Sorry. I was just going to say that the system creates dependency. So if you start to say,
oh, well, we might be able to get you off unemployment. We might be able to get you
off government benefits. People start to get stressed because they don't understand what
you'll transition to.
And that's security in hand.
When we built a drop-off, we didn't build an escalating scale where as you make $2 more,
we reduce a dollar of dependency.
It's, I went to give an employee a 50 cent raise from like $13, $13.50.
It was a couple of years ago.
And this person came to me, you know, this was a homeless person.
This was someone that we took off the street that I just saw working really hard on the weekends.
I work on the weekends.
And he told me, like, hey, what are you saving up for?
I'm saving up for a house.
Oh, cool.
Where do you live now?
My car.
I'm like, holy crap.
You're a veteran.
You work for me.
We have to fix these things.
But when I went to go give this person a raise, it was explained that if I get this raise, I will lose essentially $20,000 in benefits.
You know, I'll lose my EBT card.
I'll lose my phone.
I'll lose all of these different incentives.
But there's no elevated scale down, right?
It's once you hit this marker, you lose all of these things.
So there's no incentive to make that extra 50 cents and then that extra 50 cents, that extra 50 cents. If you were to have a,
I don't know, a business person in charge or someone who actually doesn't want dependency,
it would be an elevated scale. You know, for every $2 that you're making, like I said,
you know, we're going to reduce your, your government assistance by 50 cents, you know, a quarter of that. So, you know, I want to make an extra 50 cents. I'm only going to lose,
you know, 10 cents worth of my incentives.
We're going to go to Super Chats.
If you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button?
Subscribe to this channel and share the show with your friends.
Head over to TimCast.com and become a member because not only are we going to have that members-only uncensored show coming up at 11 p.m.,
but we have the first official episode of the Cast Castle relaunch is up live now.
Plus, we've got Tales from the Inverted World.
So we now have three shows so we actually technically the green room is a fourth show so you got the timcast uncensored monday through thursday at 11 p.m the green room which goes up
i think it goes up at 10 p.m on fridays we've got cast castle tuesdays at 7 tales from the inverted
world sundays at 10 a.m and we're going to keep making more content. We're going to keep learning and improving.
Let's read some super chats.
Grofty says, and here we go.
Watch the Cast Castle vlog.
Very entertaining to me.
You are learning fast.
I will get hate and love.
I only send love back though.
Stay real.
Oh, forgot.
Buck, buck, buck.
Thank you for the Chicken City support and the support for Cast Castle vlog.
All right.
Cracker Jack says, so we're just not going to talk about the general millie resignation letter if you don't know what
i'm referring to to please check out angry cops we did talk about the general millie resignation
letter in fact jack pasoba a couple weeks ago did this uh he read it while crying right is that what
jack did that was funny you see that he had a very melodramatic reaction yeah not a big fan june wong says tim you say create culture can you shout out clownfish tv
neon and geeky sparkles been making comics for 10 years while raising their kids
squid king and peekaboo well all right their passion project crimson wren is steampunk goonies
on an airship live uh live on Indiegogo.
This message paid for by a fan.
They should use GiveSendGo as an
Indiegogo-like censorious.
Not as bad as GoFundMe. This guy's been on
PopCulture of late, too. Who has?
This guy's been commenting that on PopCulture
of late. He's excited about it. Wicked001
says, CastCastle was fantastic
last week. Great job. Well, check out the one
that came up today, because it's quite fun fun all right mitch says chris please tell us three things about yourself
hi i'm chris that's one thing
i'm uh a youtuber and uh an army vet What's your YouTube channel? Those are three things.
My YouTube channel is Reactor.
But now he's basically writing Cast Castle stuff.
Yeah.
He was fantastic in the blog today.
I don't know if I told you that.
Nice work.
Yeah, it's funny.
You're very funny.
Very funny.
Very good.
People keep soup chatting, which I like.
All right, let's see.
Strider says, Tim, you mentioned a gaming show on your earlier segment.
How can I get involved?
I'm Gen Z and would love to work for Timcast.
I have no idea.
I literally don't.
We have jobs at Timcast.com, but we have so many emails.
It's really just a matter of our capacity.
And managerial power is the most difficult thing in expanding a company.
You want to get a job at Timcast?
Make something great and make sure Tim sees it.
Do like an awesome video that highlights your work.
Tim looks so horrified by this suggestion.
We hired Carter that way.
It took six months though.
You're going to get so many tweets.
Look for Carter Banks application slash audition to Timcast.
It's easy to hire somebody if you already know they're great.
Yeah.
And then I can't remember people. Someone sent it to me like, have you seen this video this dude made?
And I watched it.
I was like, oh, it's really good.
I was like, I can't hire anybody right now though.
And then a few months later, someone was like, remember that guy who made that video?
We need to hire somebody who can do music.
And then I was like, oh, yeah.
And then we hit him up.
And then he was just like, oh, wow.
It took a really long time.
But now he's here.
And the song we have coming out on Friday was produced and engineered by Carter.
And he's in the music video singing along. He is so he's so hard working that's the other thing about being
here you have to be willing to work he's like a real rock star i don't think he considers it work
yeah i think he loves it i think that's the cool thing about being in this environment like you get
to do things you're really passionate about yeah everybody is just basically doing the things they
want to do and i always tell people like if you don't want to be here you shouldn't be like nobody
should be here like, this is work.
This sucks.
Granted, there are some jobs that are basically work.
Like, someone has to, you know, I don't know, take the garbage out or something.
See, I think, like, things can be work and still be good.
Like, you should be feeling like you're being challenged and growing in the things that you're doing.
Somebody has to clean up Bocas' crap because he's a little... I have disparaging terms for the cat,
but we love him.
But we try to let him go and do his business outside
chasing the birds and stuff
because he likes to take dumps on the floor.
Not okay, Bocas.
Groff Delson says,
Only Ever Wanted looks and sounds good.
Hey, man, shout out.
Within like 12 hours of posting the promo,
we had like half a million views
on just the promo for the song,
and right now we're at like 700, 800,000 views on the promo.
That's crazy.
And I'm kind of like, man, maybe we should have just not done a promo because those views would have been great for the actual song.
I think the song is good enough to live on its own.
Yeah, the funny thing is the promo part we put up is the most like emo sounding part of the song.
But the majority of the song is like literally not like it's very slow and ambient today i hope it's all emo stuff only emo stuff from tim kess music
no the next one we're putting out um i don't know if it's next we're putting out but it might
actually be it's like weird experimental which one is it advice oh yeah yeah it's like people
are not gonna i i think it's not mainstream music at all. It's weird.
Can't figure out what the genre is.
All right.
Waffle Sensei says, Tim, I know it takes money, but please start making DVDs or flash drives
with a summation of TimCast episodes on them.
History favors the prepared.
Should we do season DVDs?
How many episodes of this would you put on one DVD?
Like two?
Two episodes?
What?
One?
We'll sell hard drives.
We'll sell terabyte hard drives with like...
It'd be cool.
How many episodes could you fit on that?
Episodes are like two gigs.
So a decent amount?
Yeah.
500?
It's not a bad idea, actually.
Would you do a season?
Because we don't really do seasons.
You just kind of do your favorite ones.
Yeah, I guess you could technically get every single episode on like one hard drive.
Be wild.
So we'll do flash drives with the episodes on them.
You have to start with this one.
This is where the idea came from.
That's right.
And you have to get it so it's like EMP proof,
so you can't like...
Yeah, we'll suspend it inside a small Faraday cage
with a bigger Faraday cage over the small Faraday cage
you can carry.
Faraday bags. Faraday cage with a bigger Faraday cage over the small Faraday cage you can carry? Faraday bags.
Faraday, yeah.
I have a Faraday fanny pack
that I put my phone in.
Like you were saying
you like to be off grid.
That's hot.
It's like silver threaded Faraday.
All right.
Lord Crimson Eye says,
been to your location
off 204 Tyler.
Real nice.
Haven't visited
the River Street store yet.
Planning to stop by this weekend.
Hell yeah. Cool. I got to say, planning to stop by this weekend. Hell yeah.
Cool.
I got to say, a Faraday USB is a brilliant idea.
I don't know if those have been created yet.
I don't even know how to spell Faraday.
You'd have to like...
It's been a day.
D-A-Y.
How it would work is the cap would seal the Faraday cage around the USB.
You just super glue Faraday cloth around it.
But then you need to be able to open it and
close it you know what i mean so if you had a usb stick that was surrounded in a faraday cage and
you could pop the cap the top off and stick it in and use it and then close it it would be protected
but the other thing people need to understand about the big one the solar flare everyone always
talks about you don't just need a faraday cage if you really want to protect stuff you need a
faraday cage with a smaller faraday cage with a smaller Faraday cage in it.
Because I've been in a really nice professional Faraday cage, and EMF still leaks through.
It's not – you need a really multi-layered, really strong one if you want to stop every signal and create a real dead zone.
Faraday is Michael Faraday is who it's named after.
I don't know if you're a scientist.
Did you just Google that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I knew he had a name.
Our new favorite verb.
All right.
Teacraft says,
get well soon, Sour Patch.
That's right.
Lydia has gotten surgery
on her hand
and so she's all hopped up
on goofballs
so she can't press buttons
because...
I think it'd be funny
if she did, though.
She like,
is pressing buttons randomly?
She's on her the whole show.
It's just her show.
Whatever.
Still great.
I don't use Google, by the way.
I use Brave search engine.
That's better.
Laramie Bryant says,
Reminder, everyone goes out to vote in their runoffs and primaries,
and please look into bills they supported
and their track record in office,
America first only.
Yeah, I think Alaska went to a runoff, right?
There's going to be a runoff between the Republican candidates.
I think it's an open runoff, isn't it? Well, they're doing ranked choice, so they have four people who are going to the general
and basically everything.
And then what's going to happen is the Democrats are going to put all their Democrat choices
and then they're going to put at the bottom of the Republican choice of Murkowski because they're
like, well, it's better than the Trump one.
And that's how they stop the Trump supporters from getting in.
That's how we lost our Senate election in Georgia.
It was ranked choice?
We had three.
We split the ticket for the conservative vote and it went to a runoff.
Good plan.
Let's grab some more super chats.
Raymond G. Stanley Jr. says,
history will not be kind to Fauci. There's no way.
It depends.
There is.
History is written by the winners.
It depends on what happens with all the politics right now.
If the Republicans get in
and they actually do have hearings
and hold some of these people accountable and do investigations, yeah, then history won't be kind to them. But if the Republicans get in and they actually do have hearings and hold some of these people accountable and do investigations, yeah, then history won't be kind to them.
But if the Republicans get in and do nothing, which is seemingly likely, or the Democrats
end up holding their ground somehow, then no, Fauci will be, you know, they'll put up
those pictures of him as Jesus or whatever.
And that's what will happen.
Dill 1300 says, Tyler,
happy to hear that you partnered with Gulfstream.
You, sir, have a new customer and will
treat myself to new shirts
to celebrate my senior
tech promo here at our Apple
10 Wisconsin facility.
Have you heard of Public Square?
I have not. It is a mobile app
where it shows you all of
the businesses that support American values.
It's amazing.
What's it called?
Public Square.
I'm checking that out.
That's really cool.
Yeah, they're like, we'd love to sponsor the show, Tim.
And I'm like, yes.
And then here I am.
You were just talking about it anyway.
But it's so good.
It's so amazing.
You open it up.
There's a map.
And it shows you all of the businesses that have basically said, like, we agree with these
values.
Like, the Constitution is a good thing.
Stuff like that. Like, you can actually just read their values but if a business is
willing to like i stand behind that message and they appear on this map they're opening the door
to uh antifa like getting canceled getting targeted but they're standing they're standing
you know firm on their beliefs those are the businesses you got to support yeah definitely
so you guys should definitely they uh there they digital businesses can still put their information
in it and then brick and mortar locations
put their brick and mortar locations. Then people can see
the pins and then click it and see what store it is.
And you can type in what you're looking for.
Clothes, food, whatever. And then it'll
show you in your city where the
American value stores are at.
That's what I'm talking about. Gotta keep voting with that dollar.
That's right. Stop giving your money to people who hate you.
Give your money to people who make clothes in America, for instance.
I'm a big fan of that.
Like 9lineapparel.com.
That is one.
9lineapparel.com.
I think that's definitely one for sure.
That's right.
You got any shirts like this?
I don't know many others.
We'll grab some shirts.
Nuclear Drunk 3PO says, I own a nine line shirt and I freaking love it.
Shout out to drunk 3PO.
And I love supporting American made.
That's the way to do it.
Ian,
Ian called me out a couple of weeks ago about not buying,
buying American made clothes.
Yeah.
The banality of evil is sitting by and just sucking off the system without,
you know,
we're riding,
we're riding the beast that's killing the planet.
We got to stop doing that.
And I'm talking about supporting slaveocracy.
Basically, we got to stop doing that. And I'm talking about supporting slavocracy, basically. We've got to stop doing that.
Yeah.
I agree. Have you guys ever seen
what those guys are going
through? It's not slavery. They just
can't leave. They're not paid, and
bodily harm will come to them.
But it's not slavery. Whatever that means.
Yes. But your guys' clothes,
it's American cotton. It's American manufacturing
and everything. Yeah. We have optionality, right? So I've got 10,000 plus raw products that I will then embellish.
And we do things in South America. We do things in Central America. We do things
in the United States, but I don't do any business in China. And I don't do any businesses with
people or I guess entities that treat people that way so i will go and check
out the facilities in peru i'll check out the facilities you know in in honduras uh and they're
very large reputable humane compensating people a normal living wage just like black rifle goes to
their their coffee farms but starbucks does not not everything you sell is American-made. No. No, we try to push American-made everywhere possible.
But as you can imagine, the cost for labor, cost for everything is much higher and it's prohibitive for certain customers where I don't want to lose the business.
So I will push as an option, hey, here, this product, this shirt is made 100% in the U.S.
Here's the price point. If you can't hit that price point for whatever reason, you're
a big box store or mom and pop shop
and you just can't do it, then
here's an option for you. It's made
in South America, Central America.
But without any
slavery. 100%.
I'm always going to push US,
but I can't force people to
buy it. And that's where
government policies could help me by giving credits or to stop the import of those same goods.
Do you grow your own cotton?
Do you guys grow your own?
Me personally?
Do you own a cotton farmer?
No, we do not.
We work and partner with individuals that do those things.
My specialty is mostly embellishment and distribution.
Have you ever looked into vertical farms to grow cotton indoor?
Yeah.
That's cool.
Yeah.
I mean, I, I'm really big into aquaponics.
So we, we do aquaponics center for our, our homeless veterans village, you know, it kind
of as a therapy, but also I think it's fascinating how fish feed plants and plants feed fish.
And it's completely sustainable and it's healthier and there's less pesticides there to use.
I'm a big fan of being able to do those things wherever possible, but it's not scalable.
I mean, the facility alone is a million dollars for a greenhouse about twice the size.
All right, let's read some more.
We got Travis Rahman.
He says, can I get a shout out to my stepdaughter Zoe, who's 16 today?
Shout out, Zoe.
Happy birthday.
What's up, Zoe?
Also, my son Connor and stepdaughter Jaden turning 12 Friday.
Oh, wow. Both of them are turning 12 on Friday.
Good week for birthdays, you guys. That's awesome.
Sounds like just one big week. Connor and Jaden
both having a birthday on Friday.
That's perfect timing to listen
to the release of our new song, Only Ever Wanted.
They can play it on their birthday parties.
Happy 12th birthday.
Here's a song you gotta listen to.
I don't like this music. It's for old people.
It's funny because there are people who are trying to rag on the song and they're like oh the 2000s called they want their music back and i'm like the 2000s are so trendy right
now like i don't even care i just like dude look is is like the idea here that we're supposed to
make katie perry music or do we just make music that we like and understand that like i'm not
trying to be katie
perry you know what i mean like if i wanted a top 40 i'd do like a rap song you know like post
malone style or something one i think what we've lost is vocal harmonies having two or more people
vocally harmonizing on a song together and what if maybe that's 70s maybe the 70s are back but
what if we like took the guitar out and just added vocals? And then took out the drums and had a
guy make the drum sounds
with his mouth. And then did a couple
more vocals. And then we
could hire Pentatonix to play the instruments
for us. Yeah, they're actually playing the instruments.
Alright.
Dalimar says, spent hundreds with you. Quality
stuff and I click that Made in America button
when it pops. Bring back the
share around with Antifa shirt for a limited
time more people ask where I
got it than even the
Mando design
I made it I made a gag shirt
that said liberals get the
bike lock too it was a gag reference
to Antifa wrote liberals
get the bullet too on a wall and so
I was basically mocking them because this Antifa
guy hit someone with a bike lock and they got really mad at me the the big companies were like youtube banned the
shirt and they were like i'd cook cola try to sue me for my share around with isis share i was like
it's it's just comical yeah no it's what just get over what did it say it's a it's a similar looking
to coca-cola not their logos or designs i'm not admitting to anything
but very similar um and it says share a round and it's got a bullet with oh okay
see it's like plan words comical but people take things very seriously so the social media
oligarchs said that that was inciting violence. Right. That's what happened with the – I would happily sell it.
I just can't promote it or post it anywhere without being checked out.
But what if the intent was like to make sure you're sharing ammo with people who want to go have target practice?
My intent was to actually share a round with an ISIS terrorist to kill them.
So that was my intent.
I guess they were correct.
Well, here's – I want to say –
I want to share a round of drinks.
Oh, no.
Put a beer on it. I meant bullets. But hold on, hold on, hold on. Here say... Share a round of drinks. Oh, no. Put a beer in it.
But hold on, hold on, hold on. Here's the challenge with that.
We're actively at war with these people.
Yes. Well, they're at war with us. We're
head in the sand. Yeah.
But, I mean, when you look at, like, Russia and Ukraine
and stuff, Facebook said calls for violence
against Russia was acceptable. So I wonder
if, like, why is it that
Facebook was like, okay, if you're calling for violence
against Russians because of the war, that's fine.
But why would they say no to the ISIS thing?
Like for, I'll say this, like we don't want to call for violence, but where is the line
when your country is actively at war with like an invading or terroristic force and
we're, and we're telling you to like save people.
Or if you're a multinational company, which one did you choose to go with?
Is it right after Russia banned you in your entire
platform then you became virtuous because that's when it occurred because i was physically over
there but i will tell you that they could care less as long as they're making money that's really
what it boils with the with the shirt that i made it was meant to be in it was like opposing the
violence it was it was to make fun of them and to deride them because it's like – it's crazy.
But I can understand why people are like, that doesn't sound like what it's – I'm like, yeah, okay, I get that.
No, mine was pretty to the point.
You can probably shape the minds of a young kid who is being taught terroristic ways.
But by the time they're in their 20s and 30s and 40s and they've committed acts and
they're they're committed to being a terrorist i think there's not much you can do but i think
the distinction there is the distinction there is we're not talking about like walking up some
random person we're talking about people whose lives are actively under attack by a group that's
shooting at them and blowing them up and we're talking about pure evil you're talking about
individuals who are setting other individuals on fire we're talking about pure evil. You're talking about individuals who are setting other individuals on fire. We're talking about Joe Biden who drone strike with the
shredder, the Taliban guy. So that it's an interesting point because, you know, YouTube's
got their YouTube, Facebook and Twitter have their violence policies. But it's like, what if you're
what if you're cheering for Joe Biden who fired that shredder missile at a terrorist? Right. Like,
you know, I'm also thinking about like the military. They say that the enlistment numbers
are down and it's like there's a bit of a hunter.
Go kill the thing mentality for someone that wants to join a military.
And maybe we've lost that.
Or I just I just want to say, you know what, man?
Like, I wish none of this happened.
I wish, you know, you were mentioning how when you were younger, you were like, we're all just people.
Can we get along?
And like, I wish that was the case.
I wish I wish ISIS would stop doing these things. I wish the ideology didn't exist i wish there wasn't war but right now
you've got like russia for instance they invade ukraine like what are we supposed to say to that
are we supposed to be you know look i don't i don't like american intervention i don't like
the u.s you know all the stuff but am i supposed to be like no no ukrainians should just let them
do it it's like nope there's there's good and evil in the world my grandfather entered world war ii at the age of 17 stormed the beaches of iwo jima got shot in the knee got shot
in the helmet but he set that example of that's not my fight but me and all my friends are going to
fake our age we're going to go and stop pure evil and that i will tell you that that the things that
they're doing to the ukrainian people is pure evil. That's it's it's what Hitler and his band of merry, horrible humans did to the Jewish population.
And it's it's unfathomable that we would do nothing.
Let's read some more super chats.
Augusto Mimoshay says, Tyler, Stephen Crowder has been looking for an American company to make his hand painted mugs for mug club members.
Can you help him louder Louder with Crowder.
Yes, we've talked to him a bunch of times about doing their shirts and everything else.
I just think their merchandising manager needs to pull the trigger and give us a call.
Right on.
Sell some mugs.
We made gag mugs that said louder with Roberto Mug Club because our rooster was always yelling.
Did you make the joke?
No, but I used it as a prop today.
That was awesome.
Well, we make our mugs here in the U.S.
and do it for us.
And I know Black Rifle makes some USA-made mugs,
so I'm sure louder with Crowder could, too.
Ryan the Eating Warrior says,
you guys need to watch the video,
The Five Laws of Stupidity.
It explains that stupid people
are the most dangerous demographic,
and man, is it true.
Yes. But But you know
We all want to get along
We want to find out
We want to figure out a way that we can live peacefully in this country
We don't want fighting
We don't want violence
But what do you do when you have Antifa going around smashing up windows
Communication is a big part of it
You got to keep people calm
I think that the monarchy basically started to fall apart when, at the event of the printing press, people didn't need to funnel their
information through a centralized figure. So the more ability we have with language to communicate,
understanding similar definitions and where definitions are coming from,
actual radio, things like that. Also like, yeah, some people might be dangerous, but like,
what's your plan for them? You know, there delivery we need to be able to send food to people that are in remote
areas but if you have more of the question no i was just gonna say like you can offer people all
kinds of opportunity to better themselves and learn but there are some people who aren't motivated by
that like yes it's good to advocate for peace but also let's be realistic and think about how we can incorporate a society that has a variety of options for people that don't involve pushing everyone.
Like, what bothers me about people saying stuff like that is like, okay, cool, but why do we push everyone to follow the same educational structure?
Why do we have the exact same model for public schools like that consistently fails students?
We're saying that stupid people are the problem, but we're not using any innovation to try and change. It's cultural.
It's really bad. Everything is culture. Everything is parents raising their kids.
We talk about changing laws. We talk about all of these things. Culture.
It's a degradation of values. They say you're a product of your environment. And it's really
hard for individuals to break out of that negative
environment right so if my kids have opportunities that i've never had you know that they get schools
where they're not getting beat up all the time where they're not the minority where they're not
you know having to um go through those adversities but those adversities make
make you who you are it definitely define you sean willis says tim you say 50 bmg has
no self-defense or hunting purpose i didn't say that well uh what i said what i was saying was
that it's for it's an anti-material round it's for tanks and helicopters and certainly the ukrainians
would consider that defense right now if like they're fighting a russian helicopter you know
uh or hunting purpose and for the most part i don't know if you need a 50 bmg for any kind of
game but anyway sorry sean let me read your comment he says well i'm not going to be caught or hunting purpose. And for the most part, I don't know if you need a 50 BMG for any kind of game.
But anyway, sorry, Sean,
let me read your comment.
He says, well, I'm not going to be caught
in the woods with my pants down
when a 10 foot tall Bigfoot
doesn't like the cut of my jib.
No, sir.
Here's I'll put it this way.
A Barrett M82A1.
You're not going to be carrying that around
and then like encounter a Bigfoot
and then be like,
I'm going to defend myself. What you're going to do is you're going to be mounted that around and then encounter a Bigfoot and then be like, I'm going to defend myself.
What you're going to do is you're going to be mounted in various points around your wood, your rural fortress.
And when the army of Bigfoots – or was it Bigfeet?
I think both will work.
Bigfeet.
When the Bigfeet come.
Bigfoot.
Bigfoot.
When the Bigfoots –
Bigfeet is the way big feet Big feet's the way
Big feet is the way
When the big feet show up
And they're banging on the sides
And they're trying to punch their way in
And they're all 10 to 15 tall
And they're eating humans
And they're mindless
Then you might need it
You know
Then you might need the
I'm a big advocate of drawing them to the base
To let base defenses take care of them
In video games when I
That's good defensive tech
Somebody
I don't know where your super chat went But they said that that my TV show idea sounded like Dr. Stone, which it does not at all.
It's more like Attack on Titan, not like Dr. Stone.
Dr. Stone's cool, though.
I don't know Dr. Stone.
People get turned to stone, and then thousands of years later, this smart kid figured out a way to un-stone himself, and then he has to rebuild technology from scratch.
And it's actually really interesting.
So it's like an anime where he's like, I'm going to make a cell phone,
and then he's collecting materials to make a vacuum tube and stuff.
It's like Magic School Bus, but kind of cool.
It'd be a cool video game if you actually taught the specifics of how to build microelectronics,
not economics, but both maybe.
All right.
What is this?
Uh-oh.
I just had a good one.
Where'd it go? There we go. There we go. what is this? Uh-oh, I just had a good one. Where'd it go?
There we go, there we go.
What is this?
Ready to Rumble says,
Ian, did you see the news about JWT
proving the universe didn't start with the Big Bang?
Poor Einstein.
I saw that.
That was interesting.
No, what's the story?
I don't know if it's definitively proven
because I haven't read it.
But what they're saying is the James Webb Telescope
should be showing us that due to an illusion with the expansion of the universe, galaxies further away should start to appear larger because of the way the light is moving towards us but the universe is expanding at the same time.
Instead, they look smaller, which would either indicate based on Big Bang Theory that they're tiny, tiny galaxies or there's not a universal expansion.
Yeah, I don't think there is a universal expansion.
I think it's twisting around on itself like a double helix or a double torus, really, more accurately.
So maybe we could integrate that into the theory, the hypothesis.
Smokin' says,
Just watched episode one.
I'm assuming of Cast Castle.
You are a master of lowering expectations.
I enjoyed it.
Didn't think I would.
Expected hack.
It's not. Carry on, bud.
Well, it's a masterpiece, obviously.
I'm just saying, like, we
just have some DSLRs
we filmed funny things with. Mostly what
Chris was putting together. And
we need to improve lighting.
We need to get better microphones and just set it up.
But we just want to start making stuff, because it's
fun. We did a bunch of really funny bits
with Jamie Kilstein, with
Seamus previously,
and it was really, really fun
to do, so I was like, how can we do that consistently?
And then here's the best part.
From the promo episode,
we had this sketch with Jack Posobiec
riding up on a little bike with a wagon,
delivering the scripts for TimCast, as if it was scripted.
And he's like, got him out of Mar-a-Lago,
just in time. And then he's like, with the little with a little bike. And then he runs, it got over a
hundred thousand views, just this one gag. So the idea here was what really works on YouTube
is that we have these funny bits, but it's not easy to share when it's a full 20 minute or 10
minute video. So we were like, can we just take the funny things we do with our friends and guests
and then make those really shareable videos that are just basically promos for the full show?
So I don't want to spoil anything, but Marjorie Taylor Greene did a bit with us, and it was really, really good.
It's really good.
And Ian's in it.
And we're going to have that up.
I think that one's going to be next week.
And then we're excited.
Well, I don't want to say anymore because we have upcoming guests.
We normally don't announce who the guests are, so I won't say much.
But we'll grab just a couple more Super Chats, maybe just one more Super Chat.
Chris Scannapiso.
You're probably pronouncing that wrong.
Nine Line.
Is that a reference to a military Nine Line?
Do you guys sell a good dry fit shirt?
We do.
And yes, it is.
So Nine Line is a Kazakh call in the military.
We like to say back here it's a call for action to try to reinvigorate patriotism.
Right on.
What does that mean, Nine Line?
I haven't heard that term before.
In the military, Nine Line is a CASAVAC call.
Nine separate radio communications that go to someone like me, who's a CASAVAC pilot,
and I would come into the battlefield and pull you off and get you to safety.
They call it the golden hour.
If you're bleeding out trying to get you to a hospital or some type of surgical bed within that first hour of trauma, they call
it nine line because they actually call you nine times. Is that what you said? Nope. So it's,
it's one radio call with nine separate lines of information I need, like where the bad guys are,
where the good guys are, where do you marking the landing zone with what type of litter do you need
me to bring? Is there the last nuclear, biological, and chemical considerations, which if you're telling me things on line nine, that sucks.
That means I'm wearing a mop suit and it's really hot and I haven't had one of those.
But, yeah, it's just saying that I'm injured, come get me, and most likely under fire.
And that's why most people in the military know what a nine line
is. It's a call for help. And like I said, try to make that transition here. It's a call for action.
Right on. Ladies and gentlemen, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button
right now, share the show with your friends and head over to timcast.com because we're going to
have a spicy members only show coming up. And they've been particularly spicy over the past
couple of weeks and increasingly spicier.
But that's the way the news is right now.
And there's a lot of crazy stuff happening.
We're going to talk, I think, about Monkey Box.
So you know where that's going.
So, yeah, head over to TimCast.com.
You can follow the show at TimCastIRL.
You can follow me personally at TimCast.
You can check out TimCast Records on YouTube.
We have the promo up for the song coming out on Friday.
And Tyler, you want to shout anything out?
Yeah, check out all the things he said and check out NineLineApparel.com.
Right on.
It's shameless plug.
I'm Hannah Claire Brimelow.
I write for TimCast.com.
I think you should check it every day for all of your news.
You can find me on Instagram at hannahclaire.b.
And you can follow me anywhere on the internet
at Ian Crossland for the most part
make sure it's me because there are some Ian Crosslands out there
there are other Ian Crosslands out there other than me
but you know where to find me
see you guys later
and you can follow me on social media
we're actually with the launch of Timcast Records
we're going to be producing music for other bands
we're probably going to be signing deals with other bands
to start producing more music across the board and then we're just going to start making music.
So I don't exactly know how we're going to start scouting out bands and doing deals,
but we are. And we've already got a bunch of people hitting us up. They're like,
ooh, sign me, sign me. And I'm like, yeah, I guess we'll figure it out.
It's like, do you have good music? And that's the big question. So with that being said,
we will see all of you over at timcast.com.
Thanks for hanging out.
